School of Population Health & Environmental Sciences, King's College London, London, UK
Department of Population Health, Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMJ Sex Reprod Health. 2022 Apr;48(2):93-102. doi: 10.1136/bmjsrh-2021-201168. Epub 2021 Aug 27.
Online contraception services increasingly provide information, clinical assessment and home-delivered oral contraceptives (OCs). Evidence is lacking on the effects of online contraceptive service use on short-term contraceptive continuation.
Cohort study comparing contraceptive continuation between new users of a free-to-access online OC service in South East London with those from other, face-to-face services in the same area. Online questionnaires collected data on participants' sociodemographic characteristics, motivations for OC access, service ratings, OC knowledge and contraceptive use. Contraceptive use in the 4-month study period was measured using health service records. Unadjusted and multivariable logistic regression models compared outcomes between the online service group and those using other services.
Online service-users (n=138) were more likely to experience short-term continuation of OCs compared with participants using other services (n=98) after adjusting for sociodemographic and other characteristics (adjusted OR 2.94, 95% CI 1.52 to 5.70). Online service-users rated their service more highly (mean 25.22, SD 3.77) than the other services group (mean 22.70, SD 4.35; p<0.001), valuing convenience and speed of access. Among progestogen-only pill users, knowledge scores were higher for the online group (mean 4.83, SD 1.90) than the other services group (mean 3.87, SD 1.73; p=0.007). Among combined oral contraceptive users, knowledge scores were similar between groups.
Free-to-access, online contraception has the potential to improve short-term continuation of OCs. Further research using a larger study population and analysis of longer-term outcomes are required to understand the impact of online services on unintended pregnancy.
在线避孕服务越来越多地提供信息、临床评估和家庭配送口服避孕药(OC)。缺乏关于在线避孕服务使用对短期避孕持续的影响的证据。
在伦敦东南部,对免费使用在线 OC 服务的新用户与同一地区其他面对面服务的用户进行了一项队列研究,比较了避孕的连续性。在线问卷收集了参与者的社会人口统计学特征、获取 OC 的动机、服务评分、OC 知识和避孕使用的数据。在 4 个月的研究期间,使用健康服务记录测量避孕使用情况。使用未经调整和多变量逻辑回归模型比较了在线服务组和使用其他服务的参与者的结果。
调整社会人口统计学和其他特征后,与使用其他服务的参与者相比,在线服务使用者(n=138)在短期内更有可能继续使用 OC(调整后的 OR 2.94,95%CI 1.52 至 5.70)。在线服务使用者对他们的服务评价更高(平均 25.22,SD 3.77),而其他服务组(平均 22.70,SD 4.35;p<0.001)则更看重便利性和访问速度。在仅孕激素避孕药使用者中,在线组的知识得分(平均 4.83,SD 1.90)高于其他服务组(平均 3.87,SD 1.73;p=0.007)。在联合口服避孕药使用者中,两组的知识得分相似。
免费的在线避孕服务有可能提高 OC 的短期持续使用。需要使用更大的研究人群和分析更长时间的结果来进一步研究,以了解在线服务对意外怀孕的影响。