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Citation

Bullington, Brooke W.; Sawadogo, Nathalie; Tumlinson, Katherine; Langer, Ana; Soura, Abdramane; Zabre, Pascal; Sie, Ali; & Senderowicz, Leigh (2023). Prevalence of Non-Preferred Family Planning Methods among Reproductive-Aged Women in Burkina Faso: Results from a Cross-Sectional, Population-Based Study. Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters, 31(1), 2174244. PMCID: PMC10193871

Abstract

Family planning researchers have traditionally focused efforts on understanding contraceptive non-use and promoting contraceptive uptake. Recently, however, more scholars have been exploring method dissatisfaction, questioning the assumption that contraceptive users necessarily have their needs met. Here, we introduce the concept of "non-preferred method use", which we define as the use of one contraceptive method while having the desire to use a different method. Non-preferred method use reflects barriers to contraceptive autonomy and may contribute to method discontinuation. We use survey data collected from 2017 to 2018 to better understand non-preferred contraceptive method use among 1210 reproductive-aged family planning users in Burkina Faso. We operationalise non-preferred method use as both (1) use of a method that was not the user's original preference and (2) use of a method while reporting preference for another method. Using these two approaches, we describe the prevalence of non-preferred method use, reasons for using non-preferred methods, and patterns in non-preferred method use by current and preferred methods. We find that 7% of respondents reported using a method they did not desire at the time of adoption, 33% would use a different method if they could and 37% report at least one form of non-preferred method use. Many women cite facility-level barriers, such as providers refusing to give them their preferred method, as reasons for non-preferred method use. The high prevalence of non-preferred method use reflects the obstacles that women face when attempting to fulfil their contraceptive desires. Further research on reasons for use of non-preferred methods is necessary to promote contraceptive autonomy.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/26410397.2023.2174244

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2023

Journal Title

Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters

Author(s)

Bullington, Brooke W.
Sawadogo, Nathalie
Tumlinson, Katherine
Langer, Ana
Soura, Abdramane
Zabre, Pascal
Sie, Ali
Senderowicz, Leigh

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC10193871

Data Set/Study

Contraceptive Autonomy Study

Continent/Country

Burkina Faso

Sex/Gender

Women

ORCiD

Bullington - 0000-0002-3341-087X
Tumlinson - 0000-0001-8314-8219