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Women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the CHOICE study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling

BACKGROUND: The European CHOICE study was a cross-sectional survey that evaluated women’s combined hormonal contraceptive choices before and after contraceptive counseling in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic and Slovakia, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, Switzerland, Israel, Russia, and Ukraine. The...

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Autores principales: Egarter, Christian, Frey Tirri, Brigitte, Bitzer, Johannes, Kaminskyy, Vyacheslav, Oddens, Björn J, Prilepskaya, Vera, Yeshaya, Arie, Marintcheva-Petrova, Maya, Weyers, Steven
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23448283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6874-13-9
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author Egarter, Christian
Frey Tirri, Brigitte
Bitzer, Johannes
Kaminskyy, Vyacheslav
Oddens, Björn J
Prilepskaya, Vera
Yeshaya, Arie
Marintcheva-Petrova, Maya
Weyers, Steven
author_facet Egarter, Christian
Frey Tirri, Brigitte
Bitzer, Johannes
Kaminskyy, Vyacheslav
Oddens, Björn J
Prilepskaya, Vera
Yeshaya, Arie
Marintcheva-Petrova, Maya
Weyers, Steven
author_sort Egarter, Christian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The European CHOICE study was a cross-sectional survey that evaluated women’s combined hormonal contraceptive choices before and after contraceptive counseling in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic and Slovakia, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, Switzerland, Israel, Russia, and Ukraine. The changes in method selection before and after counseling were reported previously. In this paper we present the reasons given by the 18,787 participating women for selecting their contraceptive method of choice, as well as their perceptions about the contraceptive pill, patch, and ring after counseling. METHODS: Women with an interest in a combined hormonal contraceptive method (pill, patch, or ring) were counseled using a standardized counseling leaflet. The women completed questionnaires, which included questions on why they had selected a particular method of contraception, and the extent to which they agreed with statements about the attributes of the pill, patch, and ring. The results for each country were compared with the percentages for all countries combined by using a binomial regression model. Multiple logistic regression models were used to investigate the extent to which the probability of choosing a method was related to prespecified aspects (i.e. perceptions) of each contraceptive method. RESULTS: ‘Easy to use’, ‘convenience’, and ‘regular menstrual bleeding’ were important selection criteria. ‘Nondaily administration’ was one of the main reasons women selected the patch or ring. ‘Daily use’ and ‘will forget to take it’ were the primary reasons for not selecting the pill, while the main reasons for not choosing the patch included ‘not discrete, visible’ and ‘can fall off’. In a small number of instances, the ring was rejected because some women don’t like to use a ‘foreign body’. Women’s perceptions influenced their contraceptive decisions: positive perceptions about a method increased the likelihood that a woman would select it. After counseling, many women associated the pill with forgetfulness, and many still did not know about the patch or ring’s key attributes. Women’s knowledge about a particular method was generally greater if they had chosen it. CONCLUSIONS: To support informed contraceptive decision-making, healthcare professionals should realize that a woman’s view of a method’s ease of use is more important than perceived efficacy, tolerability, health benefits, or risks.
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spelling pubmed-36051812013-03-22 Women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the CHOICE study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling Egarter, Christian Frey Tirri, Brigitte Bitzer, Johannes Kaminskyy, Vyacheslav Oddens, Björn J Prilepskaya, Vera Yeshaya, Arie Marintcheva-Petrova, Maya Weyers, Steven BMC Womens Health Research Article BACKGROUND: The European CHOICE study was a cross-sectional survey that evaluated women’s combined hormonal contraceptive choices before and after contraceptive counseling in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic and Slovakia, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, Switzerland, Israel, Russia, and Ukraine. The changes in method selection before and after counseling were reported previously. In this paper we present the reasons given by the 18,787 participating women for selecting their contraceptive method of choice, as well as their perceptions about the contraceptive pill, patch, and ring after counseling. METHODS: Women with an interest in a combined hormonal contraceptive method (pill, patch, or ring) were counseled using a standardized counseling leaflet. The women completed questionnaires, which included questions on why they had selected a particular method of contraception, and the extent to which they agreed with statements about the attributes of the pill, patch, and ring. The results for each country were compared with the percentages for all countries combined by using a binomial regression model. Multiple logistic regression models were used to investigate the extent to which the probability of choosing a method was related to prespecified aspects (i.e. perceptions) of each contraceptive method. RESULTS: ‘Easy to use’, ‘convenience’, and ‘regular menstrual bleeding’ were important selection criteria. ‘Nondaily administration’ was one of the main reasons women selected the patch or ring. ‘Daily use’ and ‘will forget to take it’ were the primary reasons for not selecting the pill, while the main reasons for not choosing the patch included ‘not discrete, visible’ and ‘can fall off’. In a small number of instances, the ring was rejected because some women don’t like to use a ‘foreign body’. Women’s perceptions influenced their contraceptive decisions: positive perceptions about a method increased the likelihood that a woman would select it. After counseling, many women associated the pill with forgetfulness, and many still did not know about the patch or ring’s key attributes. Women’s knowledge about a particular method was generally greater if they had chosen it. CONCLUSIONS: To support informed contraceptive decision-making, healthcare professionals should realize that a woman’s view of a method’s ease of use is more important than perceived efficacy, tolerability, health benefits, or risks. BioMed Central 2013-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3605181/ /pubmed/23448283 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6874-13-9 Text en Copyright ©2013 Egarter et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Egarter, Christian
Frey Tirri, Brigitte
Bitzer, Johannes
Kaminskyy, Vyacheslav
Oddens, Björn J
Prilepskaya, Vera
Yeshaya, Arie
Marintcheva-Petrova, Maya
Weyers, Steven
Women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the CHOICE study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling
title Women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the CHOICE study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling
title_full Women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the CHOICE study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling
title_fullStr Women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the CHOICE study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling
title_full_unstemmed Women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the CHOICE study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling
title_short Women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the CHOICE study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling
title_sort women’s perceptions and reasons for choosing the pill, patch, or ring in the choice study: a cross-sectional survey of contraceptive method selection after counseling
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23448283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6874-13-9
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