“A lot needs to be done to make access to highly effective
contraception a reality for low income or uninsured women,” said
lead author Joseph E. Potter of the Population Research Center at
the University of Texas at Austin. “Counseling is important during
prenatal care so women know they have this option, and actually
implementing availability of immediate postpartum long-acting
reversible contraception is a very important step.”
The researchers interviewed 403 women who gave birth in Austin
hospitals in 2012, all of whom said they wanted to delay
childbearing for at least two years. They were interviewed again
three, six, nine, 12, 18 and 24 months later.
The women reported their pregnancy status and contraceptive method,
and soon after giving birth they also noted their preferred
contraceptive method, regardless of whether that was what they were
using.
At six months postpartum, 377 women were interviewed and two-thirds
said they had already encountered a barrier to using their preferred
method. The problem was often a financial or health system barrier,
and these women were more often using less effective methods, like
condoms, or hormonal contraception.
Among women who did not have barriers, three quarters were using
permanent methods like vasectomy or sterilization or long-acting
reversible contraception (LARC) methods like an intrauterine device
(IUD) or hormonal implant.
There were 77 reported pregnancies between six months and 24 months
postpartum, including 12 percent of the women who met no barriers to
contraception and about 43 percent of women who encountered
financial or health system barriers, according to the results in
Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Of the 71 pregnancies that were unplanned, 46 percent of women would
have preferred to use a permanent birth control method, and 87
percent said they wanted to use a long-acting option or would be
interested in one if it were available for free or at minimal cost.
In 2012, there was a 30-day waiting period for sterilization for
Medicaid patients, which was one barrier women faced, Potter told
Reuters Health.
Texas drastically reduced public funding for subsidized family
planning services in 2011, so women in 2012 may have had a harder
time accessing birth control options that year than before or since,
he added.
“We started recruiting in April of 2012, so that was right at the
very worst time in Texas,” Potter said.
There had been 79 clinic closures, and those that were open were
extremely short on funds and were not able to buy long-acting
contraception, he said.
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Since then, funding has been reinstated and Medicaid has begun
reimbursing for immediate postpartum LARC, he said.
Still, only one hospital in Texas is actually performing immediate
postpartum IUD insertion or other long-acting contraception, Potter
said. In other areas, women have to go to a clinic for a postpartum
checkup and address contraception needs then.
“I am not surprised that the main barriers to contraceptive use are
financial and health system barriers, but it is thought-provoking to
see that the percentage of women who had an unintended pregnancy and
would have liked to use a highly effective contraceptive method was
so high,” said Heike Thiel de Bocanegra of the Bixby Center for
Global Reproductive Health at the University of California, San
Francisco, who was not part of the new study. “Short interpregnancy
intervals are associated with medical problems for mother and
child.”
Barriers to postpartum long-acting contraception and sterilization
are common in the United States, said Lauren Zapata of the National
Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, who also
was not part of the new study.
“Measures that may increase women’s access to preferred
contraceptives might include: improving insurance coverage for
postpartum contraceptives, authorizing reimbursement for postpartum
LARC and eliminating the 30-day waiting period for sterilization of
Medicaid patients, and ensuring women have access to the full range
of methods while they are still having regular or scheduled
appointment with obstetric providers,” Zapata told Reuters Health by
email.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Q5owed Obstetrics and Gynecology, online
January 7, 2016.
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