| Literature DB >> 30574355 |
Maureen K Baldwin1, Patricia Overcarsh1, Ashlesha Patel2, Lindsay Zimmerman2, Alison Edelman1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Federal and clinical guidelines support integration of reproductive life planning in the care of female patients to aid in the reduction of unplanned pregnancies. A multitude of tools have been created to help in the counseling component, but further research is needed regarding how and whether they facilitate patient-provider communication. RESEARCH: We performed a randomized controlled trial to evaluate if patients report whether a detailed or simple pregnancy intention screening tool is helpful for communication of reproductive life plans. We compared a novel reproductive counseling aid, the Family Planning Quotient (FPQ), to a simple tool based on the One Key Question® (OKQ). Providers also evaluated whether they thought the tool used at the visit was helpful. We randomized 93 patients to complete a survey including identical demographic questions and either the FPQ or OKQ reproductive counseling tool. We did not provide further instructions to either the patient or provider. Following the visits, we collected 84 subject evaluations and 79 provider evaluations. A similar proportion of subjects using either reproductive counseling tool found it helpful in communicating their reproductive life plans to their providers (approximately 66%), but there was no difference between the two tools studied. Less than half of providers reported that the FPQ tool was helpful (FPQ: 16/43, 37.2% versus OKQ: 18/36, 50%; p = 0.25).Entities:
Keywords: Counseling tool; Family planning; One key question®; Reproductive life plan
Year: 2018 PMID: 30574355 PMCID: PMC6296099 DOI: 10.1186/s40834-018-0074-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Contracept Reprod Med ISSN: 2055-7426
Fig. 1Consort diagram
Baseline demographics compared between women’s health clinic patients randomized to complete a novel Family Planning Quotient tool versus the modified One Key Question®
| FPQ ( | OKQ ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (mean ± SD) | 28 ± 6.5 | 29 ± 5.4 |
| Race | ||
| White | 33 (68.8) | 30 (69.8) |
| Black | 1 (2.1) | 5 (11.6) |
| Other | 14 (29.1) | 8 (18.6) |
| Education | ||
| High school or less | 12 (25.0) | 6 (14.0) |
| Some college | 17 (35.4) | 19 (44.2) |
| College or more | 19 (39.6) | 18 (41.9) |
| Income | ||
| < $30,000 | 23 (48.9) | 21 (51.2) |
| $30–59,999 | 13 (27.7) | 8 (19.5) |
| $60,000+ | 11 (23.4) | 12 (29.3) |
| Insurance status | ||
| Private | 17 (35.4) | 8 (20.0) |
| Public | 31 (64.6) | 31 (77.5) |
| Uninsured | 0 | 1 (2.5) |
| Relationship status | ||
| Single | 8 (16.7) | 8 (18.6) |
| Dating/In a relationship | 18 (37.5) | 15 (34.9) |
| Living together | 8 (16.7) | 6 (14.0) |
| Married | 12 (25.0) | 13 (30.2) |
| Divorced/Separated | 2 (4.1) | 1 (2.3) |
| Sexual partners | ||
| Male | 40 (83.3) | 35 (81.4) |
| Female | 0 | 0 |
| Both | 0 | 1 (2.3) |
| Not currently sexually active | 8 (16.7) | 7 (16.3) |
| Total number of children | ||
| None | 20 (41.7) | 22 (52.3) |
| 1–2 | 20 (41.7) | 11 (26.2) |
| 3 or more | 8 (16.7) | 9 (21.4) |
| Currently pregnant | 19 (39.6) | 22 (51.2) |