Characteristics associated with emergency contraception use by family planning patients: a prospective cohort study.Making emergency contraception Emergency Contraception Definition Emergency contraception or emergency birth control uses either emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs) or a Copper-T intrauterine device (IUD) to help prevent pregnancy following unprotected vaginal intercourse. available in advance of need enables it to be used as soon as possible after unprotected sex Unprotected sex refers to any act of sexual intercourse in which the participants use no form of barrier contraception. Sexually transmitted infections Specifically, unprotected sex , when it is most effective. Prospective randomized ran·dom·ize tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment. controlled studies in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , (1-5) the United Kingdom (6) and China (7,8) have shown that advance provision is associated with greater use of emergency contraception when needed, without adversely affecting other contraceptive contraceptive /con·tra·cep·tive/ (-sep´tiv) 1. diminishing the likelihood of or preventing conception. 2. an agent that so acts. use or sexual risk-taking However, studies found that even with advance provision and among women who frequently had unprotected sex, emergency contraception use was an uncommon event. These studies are not completely generalizable gen·er·al·ize v. gen·er·al·ized, gen·er·al·iz·ing, gen·er·al·iz·es v.tr. 1. a. To reduce to a general form, class, or law. b. To render indefinite or unspecific. 2. , since they examined specific subpopulations (e.g., adolescents, adults younger than 25, (1,3,4) condom 1. condom - The protective plastic bag that accompanies 3.5-inch microfloppy diskettes. Rarely, also used of (paper) disk envelopes. Unlike the write protect tab, the condom (when left on) not only impedes the practice of SEX but has also been shown to have a high failure users, (7) postpartum postpartum /post·par·tum/ (post-pahr´tum) occurring after childbirth, with reference to the mother. post·par·tum adj. Of or occurring in the period shortly after childbirth. women, (2,8) and women recruited after having used emergency contraception or having had an induced abortion in·duced abortion n. Abortion caused intentionally by the administration of drugs or by mechanical means. induced abortion (6)). Furthermore, most did not offer unlimited advance provision or replenish re·plen·ish v. re·plen·ished, re·plen·ish·ing, re·plen·ish·es v.tr. 1. To fill or make complete again; add a new stock or supply to: replenish the larder. 2. supplies of emergency contraception. Hypotheses of why the drug was not used more often included women's underestimation of their pregnancy risk and lack of education about emergency contraception, but little is known about what influences women to use or not use emergency contraception. We conducted an observational (prospective cohort cohort /co·hort/ (ko´hort) 1. in epidemiology, a group of individuals sharing a common characteristic and observed over time in the group. 2. ) study to provide further insight into the personal characteristics, behaviors and events that may be associated with women's use of emergency contraception. Prospective cohort studies A cohort study is a form of longitudinal study used in medicine and social science. It is one type of study design. In medicine, it is usually undertaken to obtain evidence to try to refute the existence of a suspected association between cause and disease; failure to refute provide valid alternative information to randomized controlled trials A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is a scientific procedure most commonly used in testing medicines or medical procedures. RCTs are considered the most reliable form of scientific evidence because it eliminates all forms of spurious causality. and overcome limitations such as limited generalizability, placebo effects placebo effect n. A beneficial effect in a patient following a particular treatment that arises from the patient's expectations concerning the treatment rather than from the treatment itself. and problems with intention-to-treat analysis. (9) The primary goal of this article is to analyze data collected at publicly funded clinics in the United States to determine the association between the recent use of emergency contraception and specific characteristics--particularly whether the policy of each participant's clinic was to provide access to emergency contraception in advance or only during emergency visits (for immediate use), but also environmental, situational and behavioral behavioral pertaining to behavior. behavioral disorders see vice. behavioral seizure see psychomotor seizure. characteristics. Information from this study should help to guide efforts to increase emergency contraception use when needed. METHODS Study Design This was a multisite prospective study of two cohorts of women attending Title X-funded family planning clinics family planning clinic n → clínica de planificación familiar family planning clinic n → centre m de planning familial in Pennsylvania Pennsylvania (pĕnsəlvā`nyə), one of the Middle Atlantic states of the United States. It is bordered by New Jersey, across the Delaware River (E), Delaware (SE), Maryland (S), West Virginia (SW), Ohio (W), and Lake Erie and New York . The clinics were located in a variety of urban, suburban and rural areas in the state. They were chosen according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. two criteria: willingness to participate in the study and having a large client pool. Women were eligible to enroll if they indicated a possible need for emergency contraception in the next 12 months--i.e., they were between the ages of 15 and 39, were sexually active (or planned to be in the next 12 months), were not pregnant or trying to become pregnant in the next 12 months, were not sterilized ster·il·ize tr.v. ster·il·ized, ster·il·iz·ing, ster·il·iz·es 1. To make free from live bacteria or other microorganisms. 2. , did not have a partner who was sterilized and were not using a contraceptive implant implant /im·plant/ (im-plant´) to insert or to graft (tissue, or inert or radioactive material) into intact tissues or a body cavity. or IUD IUD Definition An IUD is an intrauterine device made of plastic and/or copper that is inserted into the womb (uterus) by way of the vaginal canal. One type releases a hormone (progesterone), and is replaced each year. . One cohort was recruited from four clinics in southeastern Pennsylvania (Philadelphia and four adjacent suburban counties), where all Title X-funded clinics have a written policy to provide education about emergency contraception and offer the drug in advance of need to all eligible clients, as well as during emergent emergent /emer·gent/ (e-mer´jent) 1. coming out from a cavity or other part. 2. pertaining to an emergency. emergent 1. coming out from a cavity or other part. 2. coming on suddenly. visits to the clinic. These women were not given emergency contraception at enrollment; fewer than half recalled having been offered emergency contraception during previous clinic visits. By contrast, in prior studies (1-8) on advance provision of emergency contraception, all participants were generally given the drug at the start of the study. The second cohort was from five clinics in western Pennsylvania Western Pennsylvania consists of the western third of the state of Pennsylvania in the United States. Pittsburgh is the largest city in the region, with a metropolitan area of about 2.4 million people, and is the cultural center for Western Pennsylvania. (predominantly pre·dom·i·nant adj. 1. Having greatest ascendancy, importance, influence, authority, or force. See Synonyms at dominant. 2. Pittsburgh and Erie). Title X-funded clinics in this region have a policy of providing education about and offering to provide emergency contraception only on an emergent basis through either a visit to a clinic or a prescription call to a local pharmacy pharmacy, art of compounding and dispensing drugs and medication. The term is also applied to an establishment used for such purposes. Until modern times medication was prepared and dispensed by the physician himself. In the 18th cent. (for current clinic clients). A few of the women in this cohort recalled having been offered advance access to emergency contraception during a previous clinic visit. Our study aimed to test whether women attending clinics with an advance access policy were more likely to have used emergency contraception than women attending clinics with an emergent access policy, and to identify environmental, situational and behavioral characteristics associated with use. (10) The study was approved by the institutional review boards of the Family Health Council (via the University of Pittsburgh), the Family Planning family planning Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources. Council and the Planned Parenthood Planned Parenthood A service mark used for an organization that provides family planning services. Federation of America. Data Collection Between June 2001 and July 2002, informed consent was obtained from potential participants and data were collected using a screener survey and an intake survey; monthly automated au·to·mate v. au·to·mat·ed, au·to·mat·ing, au·to·mates v.tr. 1. To convert to automatic operation: automate a factory. 2. phone surveys continued through March 2004. All surveys were conducted in English. The monthly phone survey methodology was modeled on the experience sampling method, which repeatedly collects self-reported behavioral data over a representative sample of time in a participant's life. (11) Monthly surveys were deemed appropriate, as menses menses /men·ses/ (men´sez) the monthly flow of blood from the female genital tract. men·ses n. patterns are good proxies for such reproductive-related events as pregnancy status, sexual activity and emergency contraception use. Survey design and implementation procedures were identical in the two regions. Interviewers from both regions attended training for a day and a half on how to recruit potential participants, obtain informed consent, conduct in-person and telephone interviews, and perform scheduling and follow-up follow-up, n the process of monitoring the progress of a patient after a period of active treatment. follow-up subsequent. follow-up plan activities. * Screener and intake surveys. Interviewers approached potentially eligible women in clinic waiting rooms, described the project and invited the women to participate. Women completed a self-administered screener survey to determine eligibility. This survey consisted of 10 closed-ended questions and collected basic demographic information and reproductive health Within the framework of WHO's definition of health[1] as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, reproductive health, or sexual health/hygiene data (e.g., pregnancy intentions, sexual activity, contraceptive use and familiarity with emergency contraception). The interviewers then administered the intake survey to all eligible women. All but two of the 26 intake questions were closed-ended. The survey collected information about participants' demographic characteristics (marital Pertaining to the relationship of Husband and Wife; having to do with marriage. Marital agreements are contracts that are entered into by individuals who are about to be married, are already married, or are in the process of ending a marriage. and partnership status, importance of religion, education and occupation); sexual activity (including unprotected intercourse INTERCOURSE. Communication; commerce; connexion by reciprocal dealings between persons or nations, as by interchange of commodities, treaties, contracts, or letters. ); opinions about becoming pregnant in the next year; contraceptive history; and attitudes toward, knowledge of and use of emergency contraception. Data from both surveys were combined into a single baseline The horizontal line to which the bottoms of lowercase characters (without descenders) are aligned. See typeface. baseline - released version data set for analytic an·a·lyt·ic or an·a·lyt·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to analysis or analytics. 2. Expert in or using analysis, especially one who thinks in a logical manner. 3. Psychoanalytic. purposes. * Monthly automated phone survey. At recruitment, participants were given a pager and free service to allow the research team to remind them of future surveys. Interviewers trained the participants in the use of the pager and the telephone interactive voice response system used to collect survey data, STAR. Participants were signaled by their pager to call the automated telephone survey Automated surveys are used to collect information and gain feedback via the telephone and the internet. Automated surveys are used for customer research purposes by call centres for customer relationship management and performance management purposes. service on a monthly basis for 18 months. The survey consisted of 18 female-recorded, closed-ended questions that were developed and validated val·i·date tr.v. val·i·dat·ed, val·i·dat·ing, val·i·dates 1. To declare or make legally valid. 2. To mark with an indication of official sanction. 3. by the research team. These questions asked about the participants' sexual activity and contraceptive use in the past 30 days (including reasons for use or nonuse of emergency contraception), as well as partnership and pregnancy status. Participants indicated their responses using the telephone keypad A telephone keypad is a keypad that appears on a “Touch Tone” telephone. It was standardised when the Dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) system was introduced in the 1960s, and replaced the rotary dial. . The survey company generated automatic monthly logs of participants' response data and indicated which women completed the monthly survey and the date of their responses. This enabled the research team to follow up with participants who did not respond to their pager reminders. Women who failed to respond to more than three consecutive pages had their pager service discontinued dis·con·tin·ue v. dis·con·tin·ued, dis·con·tin·u·ing, dis·con·tin·ues v.tr. 1. To stop doing or providing (something); end or abandon: . The number of days between phone surveys was categorized cat·e·go·rize tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es To put into a category or categories; classify. cat by 30-day (one-month) intervals; thus, for instance, a call made 45 days after the previous call was counted as occurring two months (one "month" of 30 days, plus 15 days) later. * Sample. A total of 1,938 women were screened; of these, 1,094 were enrolled, and the remainder either were ineligible in·el·i·gi·ble adj. 1. Disqualified by law, rule, or provision: ineligible to run for office; ineligible for health benefits. 2. or refused to participate because they were not interested or too busy. Women who were eligible but did not enroll did not differ in terms of their familiarity with emergency contraception from those who did enroll. STAR provided data for 5,230 phone surveys. Data for 12 women (47 surveys) were excluded from analyses because subsequent information indicated that the eligibility criteria had not been met. Logic checks resulted in the exclusion of data from 124 additional phone surveys, including the surveys of three participants who continually con·tin·u·al adj. 1. Recurring regularly or frequently: the continual need to pay the mortgage. 2. provided invalid Null; void; without force or effect; lacking in authority. For example, a will that has not been properly witnessed is invalid and unenforceable. INVALID. In a physical sense, it is that which is wanting force; in a figurative sense, it signifies that which has no effect. data (i.e., indicated repeated use of emergency contraception while pregnant), surveys completed either less than 28 days or more than 19 months after recruitment, and multiple surveys completed in one month by a single participant. Of the 1,082 eligible enrolled participants, 75% completed between one and 18 valid phone surveys (mean, 6.3 per participant), for a total of 5,059 surveys (35% of the possible total); the remaining 25% were lost to follow-up. Loss to follow-up differed according to clinic type: 31% among women from advance access clinics and 19% among those from emergent access clinics (p<.001). At baseline, the participants who completed at least one valid phone survey were slightly older than those who completed none (mean age, 23.3 vs. 22.1 years; p=.002) and had a higher level of education (36% vs. 28% had some postsecondary education; p=.002). No other baseline variables (including past emergency contraception use) differed between responding and nonresponding participants. In 1,359 phone surveys, participants indicated that they had not been sexually active in the previous month; because these women could not have been in a position to need emergency contraception, they were excluded from subsequent analyses. Seventy-nine women were thus excluded, leaving 729 women and their 3,700 phone surveys eligible for analysis. Statistically indistinguishable proportions of women who did and did not report use of emergency contraception in the first survey (59% and 64%, respectively) went on to complete a second phone survey. Thus, missing data for the second survey was not dependent on the value of the outcome variable in the first survey. Measures The primary outcome measure-emergency contraception contraception: see birth control. contraception Birth control by prevention of conception or impregnation. The most common method is sterilization. The most effective temporary methods are nearly 99% effective if used consistently and correctly. use in the past 30 days--was derived from the question "Have you used emergency contraception in the last 30 days?" and was measured separately for each phone survey. Most independent variables were self-explanatory, but some were modified as follows. Separate questions asked participants to indicate their race and ethnicity ethnicity Vox populi Racial status–ie, African American, Asian, Caucasian, Hispanic . Responses of American Indian American Indian or Native American or Amerindian or indigenous American Any member of the various aboriginal peoples of the Western Hemisphere, with the exception of the Eskimos (Inuit) and the Aleuts. or Alaska native, Asian, native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander Pacific Islander n. 1. A native or inhabitant of any of the Polynesian, Micronesian, or Melanesian islands of Oceania. 2. A person of Polynesian, Micronesian, or Melanesian descent. See Usage Note at Asian. , or more than one race were collapsed into an "other" category. Responses on race and ethnicity were then combined into a single variable; women were categorized as non-Hispanic black, non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic other and Hispanic Hispanic Multiculture A person of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central or South American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race Social medicine Any of 17 major Latino subcultures, concentrated in California, Texas, Chicago, Miam, NY, and elsewhere . Possible responses to the question "If you were to get pregnant in the next 12 months, how would you feel?" were "very bad," "bad," "OK," "good," "very good" and "don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. ." Responses of "don't know" were considered ambivalent am·biv·a·lent adj. Exhibiting or feeling ambivalence. am·biv a·lent·ly adv.Adj. 1. and grouped with "OK" because respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy. did not choose good or bad categories. Very few women responded "very good," so they were grouped with those responding "good" to increase the precision of the odds ratio estimates. The variable determining whether women had been offered emergency contraception was derived from the question "During any previous visit to this clinic, were you offered emergency contraception pills?" Perceived pregnancy probability was measured by the question "What is the chance that you would become pregnant the next time you had sex if you did not use any method of birth control?" The interviewer provided a visual analog scale (resembling a thermometer thermometer, instrument for measuring temperature. Galileo and Sanctorius devised thermometers consisting essentially of a bulb with a tubular projection, the open end of which was immersed in a liquid. ), on which participants were asked to mark their pregnancy probability on a scale from 0 (no chance) to 100 (certainty). The variable measuring sex without birth control in the past 30 days was constructed as a dichotomous di·chot·o·mous adj. 1. Divided or dividing into two parts or classifications. 2. Characterized by dichotomy. di·chot variable from a question that asked the number of unprotected intercourse events in the past 30 days. Analyses Power was calculated using the primary outcome, emergency contraception use in the past 30 days. At the outset of the study, the best available published estimate was by Glasier and Baird, (6) who found that 47% of women in their advance access group and 27% of women in their emergent access group used emergency contraception during a one-year follow-up period. However, on the basis of information from family planning providers in each of our study regions, we estimated that only 20% of women in the advance access group and 12% of those in the emergent access group would use emergency contraception at least once over the 18-month study period. Using these estimates, and an alpha set at 5% (two-tailed test two-tailed test a test in which both 'large' and 'small' values of the test statistic indicate that the null hypothesis is not correct. ), we calculated that a sample size of 373 in each group would result in 85% power to detect a statistically significant difference in emergency contraception use. Survey data were transferred into SPSS A statistical package from SPSS, Inc., Chicago (www.spss.com) that runs on PCs, most mainframes and minis and is used extensively in marketing research. It provides over 50 statistical processes, including regression analysis, correlation and analysis of variance. 12.0 for cleaning and preliminary analysis. Stata Stata (Statistics/Data Analysis) is a statistical program created in 1985 by Statacorp that is used by many businesses and academic institutions around the world. Most of its users work in research, especially in the fields of economics, sociology, political science, and 6.0 was used for the multivariate The use of multiple variables in a forecasting model. analyses. The primary outcome was dichotomous, requiring a logistic lo·gis·tic also lo·gis·ti·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to symbolic logic. 2. Of or relating to logistics. [Medieval Latin logisticus, of calculation model that included specified characteristics believed to be associated with the outcome. However, the model also needed to allow that participants completed different numbers of phone surveys (from one to 18), and that participants' characteristics (e.g., new sexual partner, birth control method used) and emergency contraception use potentially varied over time. Methods that analyze the individual repeated measures are more powerful than methods that collapse the repeated measures into an average measure for each participant. (12,13) The logistic modeling was thus performed using generalized gen·er·al·ized adj. 1. Involving an entire organ, as when an epileptic seizure involves all parts of the brain. 2. Not specifically adapted to a particular environment or function; not specialized. 3. estimating equations, a longitudinal lon·gi·tu·di·nal adj. Running in the direction of the long axis of the body or any of its parts. repeated-measures technique that accounts for the potential within-subject correlation (over time) of the outcome, in order to produce valid confidence intervals confidence interval, n a statistical device used to determine the range within which an acceptable datum would fall. Confidence intervals are usually expressed in percentages, typically 95% or 99%. and p values; this approach can be implemented with unbalanced data (i.e., when participants have different numbers of observations). Generalized estimating equations are generally valid under the assumption that outcome data are missing completely at random. (14,15) Both univariate univariate adjective Determined, produced, or caused by only one variable and multivariate models were fitted, and robust variance The discrepancy between what a party to a lawsuit alleges will be proved in pleadings and what the party actually proves at trial. In Zoning law, an official permit to use property in a manner that departs from the way in which other property in the same locality estimates, odds ratios, confidence intervals and p values were computed. The interpretation of the results is the same as for ordinary logistic regression In statistics, logistic regression is a regression model for binomially distributed response/dependent variables. It is useful for modeling the probability of an event occurring as a function of other factors. . Independent variables in the univariate logistic regressions included questions concerning sexual behavior sexual behavior A person's sexual practices–ie, whether he/she engages in heterosexual or homosexual activity. See Sex life, Sexual life. and birth control use asked in each phone survey, participant age at the time of each phone survey and baseline characteristics baseline characteristic Medical practice An initial finding or value in a Pt, before any formal intervention unlikely to change over the course of the study (region, race and ethnicity, and having been offered emergency contraception at some time before baseline). Some variables that might change over time (importance of religion, level of education, employment status, receipt of income from partner, having ever been pregnant, perceived probability of getting pregnant and familiarity with emergency contraception) were included at their baseline value. Multivariate analyses included only those independent variables that related to emergency contraception use in the past 30 days at p<.2 in the univariate analyses. Because of a high degree of collinearity collinearity very high correlation between variables. between main contraceptive method Noun 1. contraceptive method - birth control by the use of devices (diaphragm or intrauterine device or condom) or drugs or surgery contraception birth control, birth prevention, family planning - limiting the number of children born and contraceptive method used at last sex, only the former was used. No other variables showed collinearity. RESULTS Participant Characteristics At baseline, the mean age of participants in both cohorts was 23 years (standard deviation In statistics, the average amount a number varies from the average number in a series of numbers. (statistics) standard deviation - (SD) A measure of the range of values in a set of numbers. , 5.5 years); nearly half were younger than 21. Overall, slightly fewer than half of participants (45%) attended clinics with an advance access policy. Almost half of all participants identified themselves as non-Hispanic black, and almost half as non-Hispanic white (Table 1). More than four-fifths of participants had a main partner at baseline, and one-fourth of participants were living with this main partner; only a small proportion had ever been married. Nearly two-thirds of participants had ever been pregnant. Participants perceived a median 50% chance that they would become pregnant the next time they had vaginal vag·i·nal adj. 1. Of or relating to the vagina. 2. Relating to or resembling a sheath. vaginal pertaining to the vagina, the tunica vaginalis testis, or to any sheath. intercourse without using birth control (not shown), and half of all participants felt that becoming pregnant in the next year would be "bad" or "very bad." About a third of sexually active participants had had unprotected sex in the 30 days before baseline, and they had done so a median of three times (not shown). The most popular birth control methods were the pill and depot medroxyprogesterone acetate med·rox·y·pro·ges·ter·one acetate n. A progestin used to treat menstrual disorders and in hormone replacement therapy, often in combination with estrogen. (the injectable in·ject·a·ble adj. Capable of being injected. Used of a drug. n. A drug or medicine that can be injected. ); 24% of participants used more than one method (68% of these reported using condoms and the pill; not shown). Although more than two-thirds of participants reported that they were "very" or "somewhat" familiar with emergency contraception, fewer than one-fifth had previously taken it. Among those participants, the median number of times they had used emergency contraception was one (not shown). When asked how long after unprotected vaginal intercourse emergency contraception remains effective, nearly half of participants correctly indicated 72 hours, a third said 24 hours or less and a quarter reported that they did not know (not shown). Despite the written policy of the clinics, only 38% of women attending the advance access clinics recalled clinic staff's offering them emergency contraception at a previous visit, while 7% at emergent access clinics recalled such an offer (Table 1). Among participants who reported having been offered emergency contraception, 86% had accepted the pills. Emergency Contraception Use Unprotected sex in the past 30 days was reported in 45% of the phone surveys, but emergency contraception use in the past 30 days was reported in only 4% (159 surveys). In all, 113 women (16% of the total) reported recent emergency contraception use in at least one phone survey (25% of participants attending advance access clinics and 8% of participants attending emergent access clinics). Of these 113 participants, 69% reported using emergency contraception in one survey only, 22% in two surveys, 8% in three surveys and 1% in four surveys. Of the 159 occasions of emergency contraception use, 20 were in consecutive months. Participants who reported having used emergency contraception in the past 30 days were asked why they had used it (Table 2). In slightly more than half of the occasions on which emergency contraception was used, women cited the reason that no birth control method had been used during sex. In nearly three in 10 cases, the cited reason was a problem with the birth control method used (in more than half of these cases, a condom either slipped off or broke). In nearly three-quarters of the occasions on which emergency contraception was used, the drug had been obtained from a clinic, doctor or nurse the woman had previously visited. Nearly every instance of use had occurred within 72 hours of unprotected intercourse; three-quarters had occurred within 24 hours. Side effects Side effects Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm. , the most common of which was nausea nausea, sensation of discomfort, or queasiness, in the stomach. It may be caused by irritation of the stomach by food or drugs, unpleasant odors, overeating, fright, or psychological stress. It is usually relieved by vomiting. , were noted in approximately one-third of instances of emergency contraception use. A total of 1,549 surveys reported unprotected sex in the past 30 days but did not report emergency contraception use. Reasons given for not having used emergency contraception included that the participant "believed [she] could not get pregnant" (26%), "wanted to get pregnant" (10%), "couldn't get emergency contraception" (10%) or was "opposed to emergency contraception" (10%); 44% of cases were due to an unspecified Adj. 1. unspecified - not stated explicitly or in detail; "threatened unspecified reprisals" specified - clearly and explicitly stated; "meals are at specified times" reason (not shown). Characteristics Associated with Use In univariate logistic regression analyses, baseline characteristics significantly associated with an increased likelihood of emergency contraception use in the past 30 days included reporting "other" race or ethnicity (as opposed to non-Hispanic black), receiving income from a partner and having been offered advance emergency contraception at a previous clinic visit (Table 3). Additionally, the likelihood of having used emergency contraception in the past 30 days increased as the importance of religion, perceived pregnancy probability and familiarity with emergency contraception at baseline increased. The lower participants' baseline level of education and employment status, the higher their chances of having used the drug. Age and having a main partner were not significantly associated with emergency contraception use. Characteristics measured in the phone surveys (each pertaining per·tain intr.v. per·tained, per·tain·ing, per·tains 1. To have reference; relate: evidence that pertains to the accident. 2. to the 30 days prior to the survey) that were associated with an increased likelihood of emergency contraception use in the past 30 days included attending an advance access clinic, having a new sex partner and having sex without using birth control; increasingly negative feelings about becoming pregnant in the next 12 months were associated with increasing chances of having used emergency contraception. Birth control method used in the previous month and at last sex varied significantly in relation to emergency contraception use: Pill and injectable users were less likely to use emergency contraception than were condom users (p<.01; not shown). Compared with women who used no precoital contraceptive method, condom users were more likely and pill or injectable users were no less likely to use emergency contraception. In a cross-tabulation of contraceptive methods and unprotected sex, 52% of surveys in which participants reported condoms as their main contraceptive method indicated at least one occasion of sex without birth control in the past 30 days, compared with 24% of surveys in which participants reported the pill or the injectable as their main method (not shown). Having had sex without birth control was not significantly associated with a lower perceived risk of getting pregnant. Most demographic characteristics that were associated with emergency contraception use in the univariate analyses were no longer significantly associated with emergency contraception use in the multivariate analyses. Surveys from participants who attended clinics with an advance access policy remained more likely to indicate recent emergency contraception use than surveys from participants using clinics with an emergent access policy (odds ratio, 2.6; Table 4). Not surprisingly, surveys in which participants reported not having used birth control at each instance of intercourse in the past 30 days were more likely to report emergency contraception use that month than those reporting consistent contraceptive use (2.0). Other characteristics associated with emergency contraception use in the past 30 days included "other" race and ethnicity, compared with non-Hispanic black identity (4.6); having a new sex partner in the past 30 days (2.0); and using condoms, as opposed to no method, as a main birth control method in the past 30 days (1.8). The higher the baseline familiarity with emergency contraception and the more negative women felt about becoming pregnant in the next 12 months, the higher the likelihood of emergency contraception use in the past 30 days (2.0 and 1.4, respectively). DISCUSSION In this study, even after measured possible confounding confounding when the effects of two, or more, processes on results cannot be separated, the results are said to be confounded, a cause of bias in disease studies. confounding factor influences were taken into account, women attending clinics with a policy to provide emergency contraception in advance of need were more likely to report emergency contraception use in a given monthly survey than were women who attended clinics providing the drug only on an emergent basis. Most demographic characteristics were not associated with emergency contraception use, but reproductive behavior Reproductive behavior Behavior related to the production of offspring; it includes such patterns as the establishment of mating systems, courtship, sexual behavior, parturition, and the care of young. and attitudes were significant. Having sex without birth control at least once in the past 30 days was associated with emergency contraception use within the same time period. Unprotected sex in the past 30 days was reported in 45% of surveys. Other studies have indicated high proportions of participants reporting unprotected sex (40% (4)) or unprotected sex and withdrawal combined (54% (5)). Raine et al. (4) showed that in their advance provision group, emergency contraception use was twice as likely among women who reported unprotected sex as among others. Like Raine et al. (4) and Walsh and Frezieres, (5) we found that only a small proportion of women used emergency contraception more than once, even though unprotected sex was common. It has been suggested (16) that nonuse of emergency contraception despite advance access may be due to women's underestimating the risk of unintended pregnancy and thereby their need for emergency contraception. However, in this study, perceived risk of pregnancy was not related to frequency of unprotected sex or to use of emergency contraception. Women with no main birth control method-who are assumed to be at high risk of unintended pregnancy-were less likely to use emergency contraception than were those who used condoms as their main method. That 44% of surveys from women who had had unprotected sex gave no clear reason for nonuse of emergency contraception suggests a degree of ambivalence ambivalence (ămbĭv`ələns), coexistence of two opposing drives, desires, feelings, or emotions toward the same person, object, or goal. The ambivalent person may be unaware of either of the opposing wishes. about pregnancy prevention. Published rates of emergency contraception use vary. In Scotland, Glasier and Baird (6) estimated that 47% of women given emergency contraception at study initiation and 27% of those who were given the drug on an emergent basis used it in a one-year period. In California, Raine et al. (4) found use rates over a six-month period to be 37% and 21%, respectively; Walsh and Frezieres (5) found rates of 19% and 12%, respectively, after 3-9 months. Gold et al., (3) who studied women aged 15-20 in Pittsburgh, found that 17% of their advance access group and 13% of their controls used emergency contraception over six months. In our study, 25% of women attending clinics with an advance access policy and 8% of those attending clinics with an emergent access policy used emergency contraception (over a maximum of 18 months). Differences in three important baseline characteristics may explain why we observed a lower level of use than Raine et al. (4): Our cohort had a lower level of previous emergency contraception use (18% vs. 35%) and condom-only use (18% vs. 47%), and higher levels of injectable use (26% vs. none). Levels of past use of emergency contraception and condom-only use were also higher in Glasier and Baird's study (60% and 72%) than in ours. Like some previous researchers, (17) but not others, (5) we found that younger women were no more likely than older women to report emergency contraception use. Women with a main partner were as likely as those without a main partner to have used emergency contraception in the past 30 days. Having a new partner was associated with increased odds of recent emergency contraception use: further research should explore whether this association reflects shifts in, for example, contraceptive use, pregnancy goals and partner communication when relationship status changes. In addition, most studies of emergency contraception use have looked at the effect of advance provision on subsequent contraceptive use, not the relationship between prior use of contraceptives and emergency contraception use. We found that prior condom use was associated with an increased likelihood of emergency contraception use in the past 30 days, although two other studies (1,3) that used a simple multivariate model did not find this association to be statistically significant. Limitations The study design eliminated many, but not all, forms of systematic bias. Women were recruited by convenience sampling at specified family planning clinics in each region. We do not know whether selection was independent of emergency contraception use during the study period, but this potential for bias was present for both cohorts and likely nondifferential. In addition, reported familiarity with emergency contraception (strongly associated with use in the past 30 days) did not differ between eligible women who enrolled in the study and those who did not. Participation in the phone surveys was a moderately high 75% and did not differ by past use of emergency contraception, but it was lower among women attending advance access clinics than among those who went to emergent access clinics. We suspect that the difference we observed in emergency contraception use by clinic policy would have been greater if all women had participated in the phone survey. Emergency contraception use in the past 30 days was self-reported, but not verified ver·i·fy tr.v. ver·i·fied, ver·i·fy·ing, ver·i·fies 1. To prove the truth of by presentation of evidence or testimony; substantiate. 2. medically, so it is possible that women misreported use. However, given both the method's side effects and the controversy surrounding sur·round tr.v. sur·round·ed, sur·round·ing, sur·rounds 1. To extend on all sides of simultaneously; encircle. 2. To enclose or confine on all sides so as to bar escape or outside communication. n. its use, women are unlikely to forget having taken the drug, making respondent In Equity practice, the party who answers a bill or other proceeding in equity. The party against whom an appeal or motion, an application for a court order, is instituted and who is required to answer in order to protect his or her interests. bias unlikely. Even if such bias existed, there is no reason to believe it would have differed by emergency contraception access policy. It is also unlikely that use was either underreported or overreported because of the relatively low survey completion rate (35%), as emergency contraception users in the first month were no more likely than nonusers to skip the second month's survey. The two study regions were selected because they had differing policies pertaining to emergency contraception access, not because they were different in themselves. However, unmeasured differences between southeastern and western Pennsylvania in participants' attitudes and norms that could influence sexual behavior may confound con·found tr.v. con·found·ed, con·found·ing, con·founds 1. To cause to become confused or perplexed. See Synonyms at puzzle. 2. the association between access policy and emergency contraception use. In addition, seven possible confounders, controlled for in the multivariate logistic regression model, were measured only at baseline, although their values may have changed over the nearly 19 months of the survey. For example, a woman unfamiliar with emergency contraception at baseline would have learned what it was simply by participating in the study, although we did not dispense dispense /dis·pense/ (-pens´) to prepare medicines for and distribute them to their users. dis·pense v. To prepare and give out medicines. any information on the drug's use and effects. Thus, these confounders may have been misclassified. However, we cannot know whether any changes in these characteristics varied by access policy or by emergency contraception use in the past 30 days; therefore, we do not know the direction of any potential bias. Only 38% of eligible women attending advance access clinics recalled ever having been offered emergency contraception, compared with an expected outcome of 100%. At the same time, 7% of women attending emergent access clinics recalled ever having been offered it (when not requesting it for immediate use) in the past, compared with an expected outcome of 0%. Were this measure the "gold standard" for assessing exposure to emergency contraception access in this study, exposure would have been differentially misclassified, and our odds ratio estimates would have been biased in an unknown direction. However, women were chosen for participation on the basis of the written policy of the family planning clinics in their region, not whether they were actually offered emergency contraception on any prior visit, so exposure was not misclassified. While the rate of emergency contraception use among women attending clinics with a written policy of advance provision likely varies with the consistency of policy implementation, measuring those variations was not the goal of this study. In addition to decisions or omissions on the part of individual clinic providers, possible reasons for reported deviations from written clinic policies are that participants may have forgotten instances of having been offered the drug or confused having been "offered emergency contraception" with having "talked about it" (or confused having been "offered emergency contraception" with having been "given emergency contraception at an emergent visit"). Further investigations of the variations in clinic emergency contraception policy and practice are under way. Conclusions In conjunction with improved rates of effective contraceptive counseling and risk reduction behavior, the effective use, promotion and increased availability of emergency contraception are essential if emergency contraception is to reduce unintended pregnancy. Though advance provision of emergency contraception has had no impact on abortion rates in the United Kingdom, (16) one U.S. study estimated that 51,000 abortions were prevented by emergency contraception use in 2000 alone. (18) Given the drug's potential for helping women achieve their reproductive re·pro·duc·tive adj. 1. Of or relating to reproduction. 2. Tending to reproduce. reproductive subserving or pertaining to reproduction. goals, we suggest that women would benefit from continued promotion and evaluation of access to emergency contraception in U.S. clinics and pharmacies This article is a list of major pharmacies (also known as chemists and drugstores) by country. Australia Pharmacies in Australia are mostly independently-owned by pharmacists, often operated as franchises of retail brands offered by the three major . Our study indicates that clinic policies promoting advance access to the drug are influential. In addition, our study found that familiarity with emergency contraception was associated with increased likelihood of use, regardless of whether women had been offered emergency contraception in advance. Therefore, client education in all clinic environments and during every clinic visit is important to ensuring that women have the knowledge they need when they need it. This will continue to be important now that emergency contraception has over-the-counter availability for adults. When discussing emergency contraception with clients, clinic staff should probe for characteristics associated with a higher likelihood of use, such as having a new partner, having unprotected sex, using condoms as the main birth control method and not wanting to become pregnant in the next 12 months. Acknowledgments The authors thank Susan Newcomer and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development for their support of this project. They also thank Constantine Daskalakis for his statistical consultation. Author contact: paulw@familyplanning.org REFERENCES (1.) Raine TR et al., Emergency contraception: advance provision in a young, high-risk clinic population, Obstetrics obstetrics (ŏbstĕ`trĭks), branch of medicine concerned with the treatment of women during pregnancy, labor, childbirth (see birth), and the time after childbirth. & Gynecology gynecology (gīn'əkŏl`əjē), branch of medicine specializing in the disorders of the female reproductive system. Modern gynecology deals with menstrual disorders, menopause, infectious disease and maldevelopment of the , 2000, 96(1):1-7. (2.) Jackson RA et al., Advance supply of emergency contraception: effects on use and usual contraception--a randomized trial, Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2003, 102(1):8-16. (3.) Gold MA et al., The effects of advance provision of emergency contraception on adolescent ad·o·les·cent adj. Of, relating to, or undergoing adolescence. n. A young person who has undergone puberty but who has not reached full maturity; a teenager. women's sexual and contraceptive behavior, Journal of Pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children. pe·di·at·ric adj. Of or relating to pediatrics. and Adolescent Gynecology, 2004, 17(2):87-96. (4.) Raine TR et al., Direct access to emergency contraception through pharmacies and effect on unintended pregnancy and STIs: a randomized controlled trial, Journal of the American Medical Association JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association is an international peer-reviewed general medical journal, published 48 times per year by the American Medical Association. JAMA is the most widely circulated medical journal in the world. , 2005, 293(1):54-62. (5.) Walsh TL and Frezieres RG, Patterns of emergency contraception use by age and ethnicity from a randomized trial comparing advance provision and information only, Contraception, 2006, 74(2):110-117. (6.) Glasier M and Baird D, The effects of self-administering emergency contraception, New England Journal of Medicine The New England Journal of Medicine (New Engl J Med or NEJM) is an English-language peer-reviewed medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world. , 1998, 339(1):1-4. (7.) Lo SS et al., Effect of advanced provision of emergency contraception on women's contraceptive behaviour: a randomized controlled trial, Human Reproduction, 2004, 19(10):2404-2410. (8.) Hu X et al., Advanced provision of emergency contraception to postnatal postnatal /post·na·tal/ (-na´t'l) occurring after birth, with reference to the newborn. post·na·tal adj. Of or occurring after birth, especially in the period immediately after birth. women in China makes no difference in abortion rates: a randomized controlled trial, Contraception, 2005, 72(2):111-116. (9.) Bush T, Beyond HERS: some (not so) random thoughts on randomized clinical trials randomized clinical trial, n a clinical study where volunteer participants with comparable characteristics are randomly assigned to different test groups to compare the efficacy of therapies. , International Journal of Fertility fertility: see infertility. fertility Ability of an individual or couple to reproduce through normal sexual activity. About 80% of healthy, fertile women are able to conceive within one year if they have intercourse regularly without contraception. and Women's Medicine, 2001, 46(2):55-59. (10.) Bandura ban`dur´a n. 1. A traditional Ukrainian stringed musical instrument shaped like a lute, having many strings. A., Social Foundations of Thought and Action, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1986. (11.) Larson R and Csikszentmihaly M, The experience sampling method, in: Reis HT, ed., Naturalistic Approaches naturalistic approach, n a medical philosophy that holds that illness results from external, objective causes (such as accident, infection, mal-formation, etc.) to Studying Social Interaction. New Directions for Methodology of Social and Behavioral Science behavioral science n. A scientific discipline, such as sociology, anthropology, or psychology, in which the actions and reactions of humans and animals are studied through observational and experimental methods. , San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden : Jossey-Bass, 1983, No. 15, pp. 41-56. (12.) Diggle PJ, Liang KY and Zeger SL, Analysts of Longitudinal Data, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1994. (13.) Fitzmaurice G, Laird laird n. Scots The owner of a landed estate. [Scots, from Middle English lard, variant of lord, owner, master; see lord. N and Ware J, Applied Longitudinal Analysis, New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of : Wiley, 2004. (14.) Little RJA RJA Royal Jordanian Airlines (ICAO code) RJA Red Jumpsuit Apparatus (band) RJA Rolf Jensen & Associates RJA Repetitive Join Attempt (Unreal game engine security exploit) and Rubin DB, Statistical Analysis with Missing Data, second ed., New York: Wiley, 2002. (15.) Twisk JWR JWR Jewish World Review JWR Just Within Reach JWR Johnny Walker Red (whiskey) JWR James Wegg Review (website) JWR Joint War Room , Applied Longitudinal Data Analysis for Epidemiology epidemiology, field of medicine concerned with the study of epidemics, outbreaks of disease that affect large numbers of people. Epidemiologists, using sophisticated statistical analyses, field investigations, and complex laboratory techniques, investigate the cause : A Practical Guide, New York: Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press (known colloquially as CUP) is a publisher given a Royal Charter by Henry VIII in 1534, and one of the two privileged presses (the other being Oxford University Press). , 2003. (16.) Glasier A et al., Advanced provision of emergency contraception does not reduce abortion rates, Contraception, 2004, 69(5):361-366. (17.) Harper CC et al., The effect of increased access to emergency contraception among young adolescents, Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2005, 106(3):483-491. (18.) Jones RK, Darroch JE and Henshaw SK, Contraceptive use among U.S. women having abortions in 2000-2001, Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, 2002, 34(6):294-303. By Paul G. Whittaker, Matthew Berger, Kay KAY Kick Ass Year KAY Kansas Association of Youth A. Armstrong, Toni L. Felice and Janet Adams Paul G. Whittaker is associate research director, Matthew Berger is former research manager and Kay A. Armstrong is former research director, all of the Family Planning Council, Philadelphia. Toni L. Felice is research director, and Janet Adams is former research director, both of Adagio a·da·gio adv. & adj. Music In a slow tempo, usually considered to be slower than andante but faster than larghetto. Used chiefly as a direction. n. pl. a·da·gios 1. Health, Pittsburgh.
TABLE 1. Percentage distribution of family planning clinic
clients in a study of emergency contraception use, by
selected baseline characteristics, according to clinic's
emergency contraception provision policy, Pennsylvania,
2001-2002
Characteristic Total Emergent Advance
(N=729) access access
(N=399) (N=330)
Race/ethnicity **
Non-Hispanic black 46 27 69
Non-Hispanic white 45 65 22
Hispanic 5 4 5
Other 4 5 4
Education **
<high school 24 22 26
High school/equivalent 40 35 46
>high school 36 43 29
Employment *
Full-time 28 29 27
Part-time 30 34 26
None 41 37 47
Income from partner **
Yes 40 32 50
No 60 68 50
Importance of religion **
Very 37 28 49
Fairly 42 44 39
Not too 13 17 8
Not at all 5 5 4
Missing 3 6 0
Has main partner
Yes 83 81 85
No 17 19 15
Cohabiting with main partner *
Yes 27 30 22
No 73 70 78
Ever married
Yes 15 16 14
No 85 84 86
Ever pregnant ***
Yes 64 56 74
No 36 44 26
Feelings about pregnancy
in next 12 months
Very bad 28 25 31
Bad 22 23 22
OK/do not know 38 39 35
Good/very good 13 13 12
Sex in past 30 days
Yes 77 74 80
No 23 26 20
Sex without birth control
(if sexually active) **
Yes 37 30 45
No 63 70 55
Main birth control method
in past 30 days **
None 13 10 16
Condoms only 18 10 28
Pill 40 47 31
Injectable 26 30 22
Other 4 4 4
Familiar with emergency
contraception **
No 30 33 26
Somewhat 49 55 41
Very 21 12 33
Ever taken emergency
contraception **
Yes 18 10 27
No 82 90 73
Previously offered emergency
contraception **
Yes 21 7 38
No 79 93 62
Previously accepted emergency
contraception if offered **
Yes 86 58 92
No 14 42 8
Total 100 100 100
* p < .05. ** P < .001. Note: Percentages may not total 100%
because of missing data or rounding.
TABLE 2. Percentage distribution of phone surveys in which
use of emergency contraception was reported, by selected
characteristics of the episode of use
%
Characteristic (N=159)
Reason for use
No birth control 55
Method problem 28
Condom broke/slipped 16
Pill missed 8
Late for injectable 4
Other 14
Missing 3
Source of emergency contraception
Clinic/doctor/nurse visited before 70
New clinic/doctor/nurse 11
Drugstore 2
Other 14
Missing 3
Timing of use (days after unprotected sex)
[less than or equal to] 1 72
2-3 15
>3 5
Missing 8
Side effects
Yes 32
No 68
Type of side effect ([dagger])
Nausea 53
Vomiting 18
Menstrual changes 16
Headache 10
Other 2
Total 100
([dagger]) Based on those reporting any side effect. Note:
Percentages may not total 100% because of rounding.
TABLE 3. Percentage of phone surveys in which use of
emergency contraception in the past 30 days was reported,
by participant characteristics
Characteristic %
Clinic's emergency contraception
access policy
Advance 8 ***
Emergent 2
Age at time of survey ([dagger])
15-20 5
21-29 4
30-41 5
Race/ethnicity ([double dagger])
Non-Hispanic black 7
Non-Hispanic white 2 ***
Hispanic 4
Other 12 *
[chi sqaure] 2=46.0 ***
Importance of
religion ([double dagger]),([section])
Very 7
Fairly 3
Not too 3
Not at all 4
[chi square]=7.3 **
Education ([double
dagger]), ([section])
<high school 6
High school/equivalent 4
>high school 3
[chi square]2=5.7 *
Employment([double dagger]),([sections])
Full-time 3
Part-time 4
None 6
[chi square]=6.2 *
Income from partner ([double dagger])
Yes 5 *
No 4
Ever pregnant ([double dagger])
Yes 5
No 4
Perceived pregnancy
probability ([dagger]),([double dagger])
0-33% 3
34-67% 3
68-100% 7
[chi square]=12.0 **
Familiar with emergency
contraception ([double dagger]),([sections])
Not 3
Somewhat 3
Very 10
[chi square]=15.6 ***
Emergency contraception offered
at previous visit ([double dagger])
Yes 7 ***
No 4
Main partner in past 30 days
Yes 4
No 5
New partner in past 30 days
Yes 10 **
No 4
Sex without birth control in
past 30 days
Yes 6 ***
No 3
Main birth control method in past
30 days
None 5
Pill 3
Condom 7
Injectable 3
Other 5
[chi square]=11.5 *
Feelings about pregnancy in next
12 months ([sections])
Good/very good 1
OK/do not know 3
Bad 5
Very bad 6
[chi square]=15.2 ***
* p < .05. ** p < .01. *** p <.001. ([dagger]) Measured as a
continuous variable in the multivariate analysis.
([double dagger]) Data from intake survey. ([section]) Measured
as an ordered categorical variable in the multivariate analysis.
Notes: Non-Hispanic black is the reference group for the race/ethnicity
category. Significance levels are results of univariate
logistic regression.
TABLE 4. Odds ratios (and 95% confidence intervals) from
logistic regression analyses assessing associations between
emergency contraception use and selected participant
characteristics
Characteristic Odds ratio
Clinic's emergency
contraception access policy
Advance 2.63 (1.44-4.81) **
Emergent (ref) 1.00
Race/ethnicity ([dagger])
Non-Hispanic black (ref) 1.00
Non-Hispanic white 0.65 (0.35-1.20)
Hispanic 0.84 (0.32-2.18)
Other 4.59 (2.30-9.16) ***
Importance of religion ([dagger]),
([double dagger]) 0.81 (0.56-1.18)
Education ([dagger]), ([double dagger]) 0.70 (0.49-1.01)
Employment ([dagger]), ([double dagger]) 1.17 (0.89-1.54)
Income from partner ([dagger])
Yes 1.37 (0.89-2.13)
No (ref) 1.00
Perceived pregnancy
probability ([dagger]),([section]) 1.01 (1.00-1.02)
Familiar with emergency
contraception ([dagger]),
([double dagger]) 1.97 (1.37-2.85) ***
Previously offered
emergency
contraception ([dagger])
Yes 0.78 (0.44-1.32)
No (ref) 1.00
New partner in past 30 days
Yes 2.03 (1.19-3.47) **
No (ref) 1.00
Sex without birth control in past 30 days
Yes 2.00 (1.22-3.23) **
No (ref) 1.00
Main birth control method in past 30 days
None (ref) 1.00
Pill 1.36 (0.70-2.40)
Condom 1.83 (1.09-3.07) *
Injectable 0.99 (0.45-2.18)
Other 1.11 (0.34-3.58)
Feelings about pregnancy in
next 12 months ([double dagger]) 1.35 (1.12-1.61) **
* p <.05. ** p <.01. * p < .001. ([dagger]) Data from
intake survey. ([double dagger]) Ordered categorical variable.
For a complete list of categories, see Table 3, page 163.
([section]) Continuous variable. Note: ref=reference group.
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