Abstract

Over half of adolescents are sexually active by age 18years and represent half of sexually transmitted infections (STI). These individuals often do not obtain routine medical care, so discussing contraception at each visit becomes imperative. Our study objectives were to determine the frequency of visits before contraception was discussed/initiated, and to assess factors affecting primary care contraception provision. A retrospective chart review (January 2009-June 2019) was conducted for preventive, follow-up, and sick visits; Title X confidential visits were excluded. Questions were asked about method at start and end of the visit. Nonparametric median tests for continuous variables and chi-squared tests for categorical variables assessed for differences for patient age, race, gender, insurance type, visit type, and provider gender. The institutional review board approved the study as exempt. Patients (n=12,619; median=15years; 58% female) were seen in primary care clinic. Providers asked about contraception for 82% of visits, and averaged 3 visits before contraception was discussed. For patients asked about contraception, 60% were using a contraceptive method, 15% left the visit on a new method (24.9% long-acting reversible contraception [LARC]). For patients not using contraception, 39.9% left the visit on a method. Patients asked about contraception were female, older, Hispanic, had public insurance, and were seen by female providers (P<.001). Follow-up/sick visits represented <20% of patients asked about contraception. Multiple visits occur before contraception is discussed in adolescent primary care, and factors including age, race, and gender affect these discussions. Strategies to increase contraception discussions at all visits is essential, as adolescents do not always present for yearly visits.

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