| Literature DB >> 34348734 |
Stephani L Stancil1,2,3, Melissa K Miller4, Alex Duello5, Sarah Finocchario-Kessler6, Kathy Goggin4,7,8, Rachel P Winograd5, Emily A Hurley4,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The sharp rise in opioid use disorder (OUD) among women coupled with disproportionally high rates of unintended pregnancy have led to a four-fold increase in the number of pregnant women with OUD in the United States over the past decade. Supporting intentional family planning can have multiple health benefits and reduce harms related to OUD but requires a comprehensive understanding of women's perspectives of preventing unintended pregnancies. The purpose of this study was to comprehensively evaluate the knowledge, attitudes and experiences as they relate to seeking contraception, particularly LARCs, among women with active or recovered opioid misuse.Entities:
Keywords: Contraception; Long-acting reversible contraception (LARC); Opioid use disorder; Substance use; Unintended pregnancy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34348734 PMCID: PMC8335991 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-021-00532-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Participant characteristics of those who completed in-depth interviews (n = 15)
| Characteristic | Frequency (%) |
|---|---|
| Age category | |
| 18–24 | 2 (13%) |
| 24–34 | 7 (47%) |
| 35–44 | 6 (40%) |
| Race | |
| White or Caucasian | 13 (87%) |
| Black or African American | 2 (13%) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Hispanic | 4 (27%) |
| Educational attainment | |
| Some high school | 5 (33%) |
| High school graduate or GED | 2 (13%) |
| Some college or post high-school training | 5 (33%) |
| Undergraduate degree | 2 (13%) |
| Missing* | 1 (7%) |
| Opioid use status | |
| In active use | 5 (33%) |
| In recovery | 10 (67%) |
| Residence | |
| Rural | 2 (13%) |
| Suburban | 7 (47%) |
| Urban | 6 (40%) |
| Relationship status | |
| Married or domestic partnership | 4 (27%) |
| In a committed relationship | 1 (7%) |
| Single | 10 (67%) |
| Current number of sexual partners | |
| None | 8 (53%) |
| One | 5 (33%) |
| More than one | 1 (7%) |
| Missing/ declined | 1 (7%) |
| Contraception use at last sex | |
| None | 8 (53%) |
| Withdrawal | 1 (7%) |
| Condom | 3 (20%) |
| Birth control pill | 1 (7%) |
| Injection | 1 (7%) |
| Sterilization | 1 (7%) |
| Condom at last sex | |
| Yes | 2 (13%) |
| No | 12 (80%) |
| Missing* | 1 (7%) |
*Not answered
Examples of interconnectedness of themes and Health Belief Model constructs
| Illustrative quotes | Themes | HBM constructs |
|---|---|---|
| “I don’t worry about getting pregnant because I haven’t been able to, according to doctors.” | Reproductive experiences and self-perceptions Healthcare attitudes/experiences | Perceived susceptibility to unintended pregnancy |
| “[Women with OUD] don’t want to have any more children because they’d get them taken away… I don’t want to have another one and think I can keep it, and one relapse means I never see it again.” | Relationship with drugs Reproductive experiences and self-perceptions | Perceived severity of unintended pregnancy |
| “I was just like, oh, I just wish I could get pregnant so he'll keep me forever. He won't hurt me no more. Maybe he'll love me more if I had his baby.” | Sexual partner dynamics | Perceived severity of unintended pregnancy |
| “So it makes it really hard when they have expectations of you and want you to have your insurance cards, and you have to have this or this, and you ain't got it because you've been pick-pocketed. But yet, it's like they're saying, ‘Well, we care about your health, but we don't care about your health because you ain't got insurance, so we can't help you.’” | Access Healthcare attitudes/experiences | Perceived barriers to contraception |
| “But then other girls who have been through it (pregnancy), they want birth control. But they're like me; they don't know anything about birth control. They don't know what kind of doctors. They don't have financial means to see a doctor. They don't even know how much it even costs to get birth control” | Awareness of contraception options Access | Perceived barriers to contraception |
| “It’s (the implant) the best thing that ever happened to me. It’d be perfect for a woman in recovery because if we relapse…I’m not going to go to the doctor.” | Reproductive experiences and self-perceptions Awareness of contraception options Relationship with drugs | Self-efficacy for contraception |
| "Everybody that I know in my family that have had their tubes tied, it only went right after the baby. Everytime. …And this piece of it (long-acting reversible contraception) had been an option, and I was trying to get clean, then maybe I would have thought about it." | Reproductive experiences and self-perceptions Access Awareness of contraception options | Cues to action for contraception care-seeking |
Excerpts were chosen to illustrate the interconnectedness of the themes and HBM constructs. They are not meant to solely define each theme or construct
HBM Health Belief Model
Fig. 1Relationship of overarching themes with Health Belief Model constructs