| Literature DB >> 32349745 |
Nghia Nguyen1, Linh Nguyen1, Hoai Nguyen1, Maria F Gallo2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite its relatively low effectiveness, withdrawal is a common contraceptive practice. In Vietnam, health concerns about hormonal contraception are strong and account for substantial method discontinuation. Given the paucity of evidence on withdrawal, our objective was to identify correlates of using withdrawal among women not desiring pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: Contraception; Pregnancy, unintended; Vietnam; Withdrawal; Women
Year: 2020 PMID: 32349745 PMCID: PMC7191771 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-020-00957-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Contraceptive method by withdrawal use among sexually-active women not desiring pregnancy, Hanoi, Vietnam (N = 489)
| Contraceptive methoda | No. |
|---|---|
| Tier 1 or 2 method, no withdrawal | |
| Implant | 5 |
| Intrauterine device | 128 |
| Tubal ligation | 1 |
| Injection | 1 |
| Oral contraception | 125 |
| Tier 3, no withdrawal | |
| Male condom | 88 |
| Female condom | 5 |
| Foam, jelly, film | 0 |
| Rhythm, periodic abstinence | 13 |
| Withdrawal with or without tier 3 method | |
| Male condom | 81 |
| Female condom | 3 |
| Foam, jelly, film | 1 |
| Rhythm, periodic abstinence | 70 |
| Withdrawal only | 32 |
aPer tier classification by the World Health Organization [15]; women could report multiple contraception methods
Participant demographics, characteristics and behaviors by contraceptive method usea among sexually-active women not desiring pregnancy, Hanoi, Vietnam (N = 489)
| Tier 1 or 2 method, no withdrawal ( | Tier 3 method, no withdrawal ( | Withdrawal only or with Tier 3 method ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | ||
| Age, mean (standard deviation) | 34.5 | (4.9) | 32.9 | (5.5) | 33.9 | (5.6) | 0.03 |
| Residence | |||||||
| City | 235 | (91.4) | 87 | (89.7) | 120 | (88.9) | 0.69 |
| Town or rural area | 22 | (8.6) | 10 | (10.3) | 15 | (11.1) | |
| Highest level of education completed | |||||||
| Upper secondary or less | 64 | (24.9) | 27 | (28.1) | 29 | (21.5) | 0.51 |
| Higher | 193 | (75.1) | 69 | (71.9) | 106 | (78.5) | |
| Monthly household income | |||||||
| < 15,000,000 Vietnamese dong | 54 | (23.7) | 15 | (17.4) | 26 | (21.0) | 0.48 |
| ≥ 15,000,000 Vietnamese dong | 174 | (76.3) | 71 | (82.6) | 98 | (79.0) | |
| Husband/partner ever refuse to give money for household expenses even if has money | |||||||
| Yes | 18 | (7.0) | 9 | (9.3) | 25 | (18.5) | < 0.01 |
| No or not applicable | 239 | (93.0) | 88 | (90.7) | 110 | (81.5) | |
| Sexual frequency | |||||||
| At least weekly | 215 | (87.4) | 77 | (83.7) | 108 | (82.4) | 0.39 |
| Less than weekly | 31 | (12.6) | 15 | (16.3) | 23 | (17.6) | |
| Health provider has discussed contraception | |||||||
| Yes | 158 | (61.7) | 54 | (56.3) | 72 | (53.3) | 0.25 |
| No | 98 | (38.3) | 42 | (43.8) | 63 | (46.7) | |
| Mother or sister used the IUD or COC | |||||||
| Yes | 193 | (75.4) | 67 | (69.1) | 96 | (71.1) | 0.42 |
| No | 63 | (24.6) | 30 | (30.9) | 39 | (28.9) | |
| Perception of IUD naturalness | |||||||
| Very natural, mostly natural | 154 | (60.9) | 48 | (52.2) | 80 | (60.6) | 0.32 |
| Mostly unnatural, very unnatural | 99 | (39.1) | 44 | (47.8) | 52 | (39.4) | |
| Perception of COC naturalness | |||||||
| Very natural, mostly natural | 155 | (60.6) | 54 | (55.7) | 84 | (64.1) | 0.43 |
| Mostly unnatural, very unnatural | 101 | (39.5) | 43 | (44.3) | 47 | (35.9) | |
| Importance of avoiding pregnancy | |||||||
| Very important, important | 224 | (87.5) | 79 | (83.2) | 104 | (77.0) | 0.03 |
| Neutral/no opinion, not very important | 32 | (12.5) | 16 | (16.8) | 31 | (23.0) | |
| History of forced sex | |||||||
| Yes | 22 | (8.6) | 11 | (11.5) | 20 | (15.0) | 0.15 |
| No | 234 | (91.4) | 85 | (88.5) | 113 | (85.0) | |
COC combination oral contraception, IUD intrauterine device
aPer tier classification by the World Health Organization [15]
Correlates of use tier 3 method (no withdrawal) or use of withdrawal (only or with Tier 3 method) compared to use of a tier 1 or 2 method (no withdrawal)a among sexually-active women not desiring pregnancy, Hanoi, Vietnam (N = 489)b
| Tier 3 method, no withdrawal | Withdrawal only or with Tier 3 method | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| aOR | (95% CI) | aOR | (95% CI) | |
| Age in years | 1.0 | (0.9, 1.0) | 1.0 | (1.0, 1.0) |
| Husband/partner ever refuse to give money for household expenses, even when has money | ||||
| Yes | 1.4 | (0.6, 3.3) | 2.8 | (1.4, 5.6) |
| No or not applicable | Ref | Ref | ||
| Health provider has discussed contraception | ||||
| Yes | 0.8 | (0.5, 1.2) | 0.7 | (0.4, 1.0) |
| No | Ref | Ref | ||
| Importance of avoiding pregnancy | ||||
| Very important, important | 0.7 | (0.4, 1.1) | 0.4 | (0.3, 0.7) |
| Neutral / no opinion, not very important | Ref | Ref | ||
| History of forced sex | ||||
| Yes | 1.3 | (0.6, 3.0) | 1.7 | (0.8, 3.4) |
| No | Ref | Ref | ||
COC = combination oral contraception; IUD = intrauterine device
aPer tier classification by the World Health Organization [15]
bResults are from full multinomial regression model that includes all variables in the table with Tier 1 or 2 method without withdrawal as the referent