The Emergency Contraceptive Pill: Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices of Women in Barbados

Author(s):  
A Holder ◽  
OP Adams
Contraception ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 83 (2) ◽  
pp. 159-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Safeera Y. Hussainy ◽  
Kay Stewart ◽  
Colin B. Chapman ◽  
Angela J. Taft ◽  
Lisa H. Amir ◽  
...  

PEDIATRICS ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 105 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 954-956 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marion R. Sills ◽  
James M. Chamberlain ◽  
Stephen J. Teach

Objectives. To quantify practitioner administration of the emergency contraceptive pill (ECP) among adolescent patients, and to determine if such administration is associated with physician knowledge and attitudes regarding efficacy, side effects, and appropriate use. Design. Survey of pediatricians. Setting. The survey address list was generated from a database of active Fellows of the American Academy of Pediatrics in the District of Columbia metropolitan area. Main Outcomes Measures. Prescription of the ECP in the previous 12 months, or counseling of an adolescent patient about the ECP. Results. Of the 236 questionnaires distributed, 143 (61%) were returned and 121 (51%) were usable. Twenty-four pediatricians (20%) reported prescribing the ECP, and 29 (24%) had counseled adolescent patients about the ECP. Of the practice-related variables surveyed, both the number of adolescents seen per week and the practice setting were significantly associated with these outcomes. Of the knowledge-related variables surveyed, knowledge of the timing and the Food and Drug Administration-labeled status of the ECP were significantly associated with outcomes. None of the attitude-related variables surveyed were associated with outcomes. Conclusions. This study demonstrates that knowledge deficits, not attitude-related variables, are significantly associated with the low level of ECP administration and counseling among District of Columbia pediatricians. Because knowledge deficits are amenable to educational interventions, our data suggest that informing pediatricians about the ECP may increase its administration among their adolescent patients.emergency contraceptive pill, pediatricians, adolescents.


Demography ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Damian Clarke ◽  
Viviana Salinas

Abstract We examine the sharp expansion in availability of the emergency contraceptive pill in Chile following legalized access through municipal public health care centers. We study the period 2002–2016 and a broad rollout of the emergency contraceptive pill occurring between 2008 and 2011. By combining a number of administrative data sets on health outcomes and pharmaceutical use, and using event-study and difference-in-differences methods, we document that this expansion improved certain classes of women's reproductive health outcomes, notably reducing rates of abortion-related morbidity. These improvements were greater in areas of the country where the rollout of the emergency contraceptive pill was more extensive. We also document some evidence that refusal to provide the emergency contraceptive pill upon a women's request was linked with a worsening in reproductive health outcomes. These results point to the importance of contraceptive access as a determinant of women's reproductive health and well-being and relates to a growing body of work documenting the importance of women's autonomy as a determinant of health.


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