Harrington Elizabeth K, Ouma Dismas Congo, Pike Mindy, Awuor Merceline, Kimanthi Syovata, Onono Maricianah, Barnabas Ruanne V, Mugo Nelly, Bukusi Elizabeth A, Hauber Brett
Stud Fam Plann. 2025 Mar;56(1):41-64. doi: 10.1111/sifp.12280. Epub 2025 Jan 8.
A focus on contraceptive preferences is essential to the provision of person-centered care. Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in the WHO African Region experience disparities in contraceptive access and use and reproductive health outcomes. Despite increasing recognition of AGYW needs as unique, their preferences are understudied, limiting strategies to improve contraceptive care access and quality among marginalized youth populations. We designed and conducted a discrete choice experiment among five hundred 15-20-year-old AGYW in Kisumu, Kenya, to examine the relative importance of trade-offs between contraceptive methods and service delivery attributes. Participants answered eight choice sets including three alternatives: two hypothetical contraceptive options characterized by seven attributes (effectiveness, bleeding pattern, duration of use, privacy, access location, counseling source, and cost) and a "no method" opt-out. We used random-parameters logit models to estimate preference weights and trade-offs among alternatives. The bleeding pattern was the most important determinant of stated choice, with a strong preference for unchanged or irregular bleeding over heavier bleeding or amenorrhea. Participants preferred the lowest chance of method failure as well as the longest duration of use (one year) over daily use or use during/after sex. Parous AGYW were more likely to prefer the longest duration of use. The ability to keep method use completely private was also an influential choice, particularly among 15-17-year-olds. AGYW traded effectiveness and increased cost for preferred bleeding patterns and privacy. The opt-out "no method" alternative was chosen only 2.7 percent of the time, indicating a strong preference for pregnancy prevention. Our findings highlight key insights for enhancing the person-centeredness of contraceptive care for AGYW: Kenyan AGYW place a high value on preferred menstrual bleeding patterns, high method effectiveness, longer duration of use, and the ability to keep method use private. Preference data can inform programs, including contraceptive decision-support interventions, to improve AGYW access to quality preference-sensitive contraceptive services.
关注避孕偏好对于提供以患者为中心的护理至关重要。世卫组织非洲区域的少女和年轻女性在避孕方法的获取和使用以及生殖健康结果方面存在差异。尽管越来越认识到少女和年轻女性的需求具有独特性,但对她们的偏好研究不足,限制了改善边缘化青年人群避孕护理获取和质量的策略。我们在肯尼亚基苏木对500名15至20岁的少女和年轻女性进行了一项离散选择实验,以研究避孕方法和服务提供属性之间权衡的相对重要性。参与者回答了八个选择集,每个选择集包括三个选项:两个以七个属性(有效性、出血模式、使用持续时间、隐私性、获取地点、咨询来源和成本)为特征的假设避孕选项,以及一个“不采取任何方法”的退出选项。我们使用随机参数logit模型来估计替代方案之间的偏好权重和权衡。出血模式是既定选择的最重要决定因素,与大量出血或闭经相比,强烈倾向于出血不变或不规则。参与者更喜欢方法失败几率最低以及使用持续时间最长(一年)的方法,而不是每日使用或在性行为期间/之后使用的方法。有生育史的少女和年轻女性更有可能更喜欢最长的使用持续时间。能够完全私密地使用避孕方法也是一个有影响力的选择,特别是在15至17岁的人群中。少女和年轻女性愿意用有效性和成本增加来换取偏好的出血模式和隐私性。“不采取任何方法”的退出选项仅在2.7%的时间被选择,表明强烈倾向于预防怀孕。我们的研究结果突出了增强少女和年轻女性避孕护理以患者为中心的关键见解:肯尼亚的少女和年轻女性高度重视偏好的月经出血模式、高方法有效性、更长的使用持续时间以及私密使用避孕方法的能力。偏好数据可为包括避孕决策支持干预措施在内的项目提供信息,以改善少女和年轻女性获得优质偏好敏感型避孕服务的机会。