Do contraceptive choices of Turkish married adolescents differ from those of older women?

Type Journal Article - European Journal of Contraception and Reproductive Healthcare
Title Do contraceptive choices of Turkish married adolescents differ from those of older women?
Author(s)
Volume 13
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2008
Page numbers 71-76
URL http://informahealthcare.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13625180701617589
Abstract
Objective: To compare contraceptive choices of Turkish married adolescents to those of women of reproductive age and perimenopausal women.
Methods: Demographic variables, fertility goals and contraceptive choices of adolescents (Group A, n = 95) were compared with those of women of reproductive age (Group B, n = 5224) and perimenopausal women (Group C, n = 2208).
Results: All women in the study group were married and had delivered at least once. A past history of voluntary terminations of pregnancy (TOPs) was reported often, although significantly less so by adolescents (43.1%) than by women belonging to the other two groups (66.5 and 77.4%, respectively). The percentage of women who applied no contraception was significantly higher in Group A (p < 0.05). The rate of use of withdrawal, oral contraceptives and intrauterine devices did not differ significantly between the three groups. The percentage of women who were indecisive about future pregnancy or wanted to have more children was greatest in Group A (87.4, 46.9 and 25.7%, respectively; p < 0.05).
Conclusion: The distribution of contraceptive methods used was similar among the three age groups, but the absence of contraception was most frequent in the adolescent group. The adolescents we assessed, being married and having delivered at least once, are a highly selected group and not representative of adolescents in general. Nevertheless, their contraceptive choices did not differ from those of older women. The incidence of TOPs among them was quite high. Minimization of the frequent neglect of application of contraceptive measures by adolescents requires improvement of family planning services for this age group.

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