Decide + Be Ready: A Contraceptive Decision-Making Mobile Application for Servicewomen

Author:

Witkop Catherine T1ORCID,Torre Dario M2ORCID,Maggio Lauren A2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Preventive Medicine and Biostatistics, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA

2. Center for Health Professions Education, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Women in the military have a high rate of unintended pregnancies, which is an issue both personally and with respect to the warfighting mission. One strategy to help servicewomen achieve family planning goals includes increasing education about and access to contraception. Research suggests that preference-sensitive decisions about contraceptives benefit from shared decision-making, and decision aids have been shown to facilitate this patient-centered approach. In this article, we describe the process by which we enhanced an existing evidence-based tool to meet the needs of military servicewomen and created Decide + Be Ready, a contraceptive decision-making mobile application. After extensive research into challenges faced by servicewomen with respect to contraceptive knowledge and access, we developed content for the decision aid and determined that a mobile app format would provide the privacy and convenience needed. Our team developed a prototype that, in collaboration with the Defense Health Agency Connected Health Branch, was tested with servicewomen and providers. User feedback shaped the final version, which can be accessed free from the App Store and Google Play. Early implementation has demonstrated patient and provider satisfaction. Obstacles to full implementation of Decide + Be Ready remain within the Military Health System. We lay out a roadmap for dissemination, implementation, and evaluation and explore the applications of the decision aid for health professions education in the realm of shared decision-making. Finally, we recommend consideration of decision aids for other health care decisions as a way to achieve patient-centered care, improve health outcomes, and potentially reduce costs.

Funder

Uniformed Services University Defense Health Horizons

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

Reference15 articles.

1. Unintended pregnancy among active-duty women in the United States military, 2011;Grindlay;Contraception,2015

2. Unintended pregnancy in the military health care system: who is really at risk?;Heitmann;Mil Med,2016

3. Contraceptive prescriptions for US servicewomen, 2008–2013;Witkop;Contraception,2017

4. Contraception access and use among U.S. servicewomen during deployment;Grindlay;Contraception,2013

5. Contraceptive use and access among deployed US servicewomen: findings from an online survey;Seymour;BMJ Sex Reprod Health,2021

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