Where do women and men in Britain obtain contraception? Findings from the third National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal-3)

Author:

French Rebecca S,Geary Rebecca,Jones Kyle,Glasier Anna,Mercer Catherine H,Datta Jessica,Macdowall Wendy,Palmer Melissa,Johnson Anne M,Wellings Kaye

Abstract

IntroductionTo estimate the prevalence of use of different sources of contraceptive supplies in Britain and its variation by key demographic and behavioural characteristics.MethodsCross-sectional probability sample survey of women and men aged 16–74 years, resident in Britain, interviewed between 2010 and 2012. Analyses reported here were of 4571 women and 3142 men aged 16–44 years who reported having vaginal sex in the past year. Those relying exclusively on sterilisation (including hysterectomy) were excluded. Sources of contraceptive supplies were categorised as: general practice, community clinic, retail and other. Prevalence of use of these sources was estimated, and associated factors examined.ResultsSome 87.0% of women and 73.8% of men accessed at least one source of contraceptive supplies in the previous year. Most women (59.1%) used general practice and most men (54.6%) used retail outlets. Community clinics were less commonly used, by 23.0% of women and 21.3% of men, but these users were younger and at greater sexual health risk. These associations were also observed among the 27.3% of women and 30.6% of men who used more than one source category (general practice, community clinic or retail) for contraceptive supplies.ConclusionsPeople in Britain use a variety of sources to obtain contraceptive supplies and some sources are more commonly used by those more vulnerable to poorer sexual health. Our findings suggest that national policy changes to increase access to contraceptive methods have had an effect on the diversity of services used.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Medical Research Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynaecology,Reproductive Medicine

Reference30 articles.

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5. National Collaborating Centre for Women’s and Children’s Health. Long-acting reversible contraception (NICE Guideline). London, UK: RCOG Press, 2005.

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