1. Beyond same-day long-acting reversible contraceptive access: a person-centered framework for advancing high-quality, equitable contraceptive care.
- Author
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Holt, Kelsey, Reed, Reiley, Crear-Perry, Joia, Scott, Cherisse, Wulf, Sarah, and Dehlendorf, Christine
- Subjects
Humans ,Contraception ,Personal Autonomy ,Coercion ,Patient Participation ,Family Planning Services ,Patient-Centered Care ,Health Services Accessibility ,Quality of Health Care ,Patient Preference ,Health Equity ,Long-Acting Reversible Contraception ,Decision Making ,Shared ,contraceptive access ,contraceptive counseling ,health equity ,long-acting ,patient-centered care ,reproductive autonomy ,reversible contraception ,shared decision making ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
In the last decade-plus, there has been growing enthusiasm for long-acting reversible contraceptive methods as the solution to unintended pregnancy in the United States. Contraceptive access efforts have primarily focused on addressing provider and policy barriers to long-acting reversible contraception and have promoted long-acting reversible contraception as first-line methods through marketing and tiered-effectiveness counseling. A next generation of contraceptive access efforts has the opportunity to move beyond this siloed focus on long-acting reversible contraception toward a focus on equity and person-centeredness. Here we define a new framework for increasing equitable access to high-quality, person-centered contraceptive care that includes programmatic elements necessary to provide information and services to address the barriers to accessing quality care, organized into a four-part continuum. The continuum is contextualized within structural, systematic, and social factors that influence experience of contraceptive care. We aim to provide a practical framework for researchers, program implementers, and policy makers to develop and evaluate efforts to improve equitable access to and quality of contraceptive care. Initiatives can intentionally be cognizant of broader structural and social factors that will influence their success and the likelihood of negative unintended consequences for marginalized groups and thus deliberately work to design programs that meet all people's contraceptive needs and support reproductive autonomy.
- Published
- 2020