BACKGROUND: Almost half of US pregnancies are unintended, resulting in many abortions and unwanted or mistimed births. Contraceptive counseling is an effective tool to increase patients' use of contraception. METHODS: Using an online 20-item questionnaire, we evaluated the frequency of contraceptive counseling provided to reproductive-age women during a prevention-focused visit by University of Colorado internal medicine resident and faculty providers. We also evaluated factors hypothesized to affect contraceptive counseling frequency. RESULTS: Although more than 95% of the 146 medicine faculty and resident respondents agreed that contraceptive counseling is important, only one-quarter of providers reported providing contraceptive counseling "routinely" (defined as ≥80% of the time) to reproductive-age women during a prevention-focused visit. Providing contraceptive counseling routinely was strongly associated with taking an abbreviated sexual history "often"/"routinely" (odds ratio [OR]=11.6 [3.3 to 40.0]) and with high self-efficacy to provide contraceptive counseling (OR=6.5 [1.5 to 29.0]). However, fewer than two-thirds of providers reported taking an abbreviated sexual history "often"/"routinely." More than 70% of providers reported inadequate knowledge of contraceptive methods as a contraceptive counseling barrier. However, providers' perceived inadequate knowledge was not associated with traditional educational exposures, such as lectures and women's health electives. CONCLUSIONS: In prevention-focused visits with reproductive-age women, a minority of internal medicine faculty and residents reported routine contraceptive counseling. Future efforts to increase contraceptive counseling among internists should include interventions that increase provider contraceptive counseling self-efficacy and ensure that providers obtain an abbreviated sexual history.
BACKGROUND: Almost half of US pregnancies are unintended, resulting in many abortions and unwanted or mistimed births. Contraceptive counseling is an effective tool to increase patients' use of contraception. METHODS: Using an online 20-item questionnaire, we evaluated the frequency of contraceptive counseling provided to reproductive-age women during a prevention-focused visit by University of Colorado internal medicine resident and faculty providers. We also evaluated factors hypothesized to affect contraceptive counseling frequency. RESULTS: Although more than 95% of the 146 medicine faculty and resident respondents agreed that contraceptive counseling is important, only one-quarter of providers reported providing contraceptive counseling "routinely" (defined as ≥80% of the time) to reproductive-age women during a prevention-focused visit. Providing contraceptive counseling routinely was strongly associated with taking an abbreviated sexual history "often"/"routinely" (odds ratio [OR]=11.6 [3.3 to 40.0]) and with high self-efficacy to provide contraceptive counseling (OR=6.5 [1.5 to 29.0]). However, fewer than two-thirds of providers reported taking an abbreviated sexual history "often"/"routinely." More than 70% of providers reported inadequate knowledge of contraceptive methods as a contraceptive counseling barrier. However, providers' perceived inadequate knowledge was not associated with traditional educational exposures, such as lectures and women's health electives. CONCLUSIONS: In prevention-focused visits with reproductive-age women, a minority of internal medicine faculty and residents reported routine contraceptive counseling. Future efforts to increase contraceptive counseling among internists should include interventions that increase provider contraceptive counseling self-efficacy and ensure that providers obtain an abbreviated sexual history.
Authors: Courtney A Schreiber; Bryna J Harwood; Galen E Switzer; Mitchell D Creinin; Matthew F Reeves; Roberta B Ness Journal: Contraception Date: 2006-04-17 Impact factor: 3.375
Authors: Yolanda H Wimberly; Matthew Hogben; Jada Moore-Ruffin; Sandra E Moore; Yvonne Fry-Johnson Journal: J Natl Med Assoc Date: 2006-12 Impact factor: 1.798
Authors: Patricia A Lohr; Eleanor Bimla Schwarz; Jay E Gladstein; Anita L Nelson Journal: J Womens Health (Larchmt) Date: 2009 Jan-Feb Impact factor: 2.681
Authors: Jessica K Lee; Sara M Parisi; Aletha Y Akers; Sonya Borrero; Sonya Borrerro; Eleanor Bimla Schwarz Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2011-07 Impact factor: 5.128
Authors: Mehret Birru Talabi; Megan E B Clowse; Susan J Blalock; Megan Hamm; Sonya Borrero Journal: Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken) Date: 2020-03 Impact factor: 4.794
Authors: Rachel S Casas; Christine A Prifti; Alexandra E Bachorik; Heather Stuckey; Mindy Sobota; Cynthia H Chuang; Carol S Weisman Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2021-05-06 Impact factor: 5.128
Authors: Alexandra Bachorik; Michelle K Nemer; Grace L Chen; Cristina Baseggio Alexander; Stephen R Pelletier; Lydia E Pace; Helen M Shields Journal: Adv Med Educ Pract Date: 2019-11-19