"<i>I was told it was the pill that suits me"</i>: A qualitative study of women's perceptions and experiences of medical reasons for non-preferred contraceptive use.

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Date

2025-01

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Abstract

Background

People have contraceptive autonomy when they can obtain their preferred contraceptive method. Non-preferred method use may result from inappropriate medical contraindications, which occur when providers apply incorrect contraceptive eligibility criteria during consultations. Non-preferred method use and inappropriate medical contraindications are understudied in the Global South, partially due to measurement challenges.

Objectives

This study provides the first evidence in over two decades that inappropriate medical contraindications are still a barrier to preferred method use in the Global South and offer a new conceptual frame for a neglected medical barrier to contraceptive use.

Design

We collected qualitative data from 49 in-depth interviews and 17 focus group discussions (n = 146) with women of reproductive age (15-49) in an anonymized African country.

Methods

We deductively identified instances of preferred method denial for medical reasons, then analyzed these episodes to determine whether the medical reasons for denial were evidence-based.

Results

We found that many women who reported preferred method denial described being offered medical reasons discordant with evidence-based guidelines, often resulting in what we determined to be contraceptive coercion. Specifically, we identified that (1) women experienced bi-directional contraceptive coercion with medical rationales, (2) women trusted providers' medical authority and felt unable to ask for more information, and finally, (3) women's personal reasons for their contraceptive preferences were rendered illegitimate by providers' use of biomedical language and (often incorrect) medical rationales. Consequentially, some women self-reported information indicating a legitimate contraindication to the non-preferred method their provider encouraged them to use.

Conclusion

Inappropriate medical contraindications are an under-studied facility-level barrier to contraceptive access that can result in contraceptive coercion, negative health outcomes, discontinuation of wanted methods, and loss of reproductive autonomy. Addressing inappropriate medical contraindications will require solutions that negotiate both structural factors and individual provider behavior to improve the quality of contraceptive service provision.

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Subjects

Humans, Contraception, Focus Groups, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Contraception Behavior, Qualitative Research, Coercion, Adolescent, Adult, Middle Aged, Female, Interviews as Topic, Young Adult, Patient Preference, Contraindications, Drug

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1177/17455057251358983

Publication Info

Chung, Stephanie, Katherine Tumlinson, Aunchalee Palmquist and Leigh Senderowicz (2025). "<i>I was told it was the pill that suits me"</i>: A qualitative study of women's perceptions and experiences of medical reasons for non-preferred contraceptive use. Women's health (London, England), 21. p. 17455057251358983. 10.1177/17455057251358983 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34303.

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Scholars@Duke

Loscalzo Palmquist

Aunchalee E Loscalzo Palmquist

Associate Professor of the Practice of Global Health

Dr. Aunchalee Palmquist is an Associate Professor of the Practice at the Duke Global Health Institute with a secondary appointment in Cultural Anthropology. She holds a PhD in Medical Anthropology from the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa and is an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant (IBCLC). 

Dr. Palmquist is a global health equity scholar, feminist ethnographer, and internationally recognized breastfeeding and human lactation researcher. Her scholarship bridges biocultural medical anthropology and global health. Inspired by feminist anthropology, Indigenous methodologies, bioethics, and human rights frameworks, she uses research to uncover root causes of global health challenges and to imagine new directions for policy, practice, and advocacy. Dr. Palmquist has over 20 years of experience conducting ethnographic, mixed-methods, and community-based participatory research and collaborates on interdisciplinary research with scholars from around the world. 

Prior to joining DGHI, Dr. Palmquist was an Assistant Professor at the UNC Chapel Hill Gillings School of Global Public Health and the Carolina Global Breastfeeding Institute. She was the 2021 recipient of a Gillings Faculty Award for Excellence in Health Equity Research and a two-time recipient of a Teaching Innovation Award in the Gillings School, Department of Maternal and Child Health (2020, 2023). Dr. Palmquist is the recipient of the 2024 American Anthropological Association's Solon T. Kimball Award for Practicing and Applied Anthropology and the 2024-2025 DGHI Graduate Professor of the Year award.

Dr. Palmquist has served as a CGBI representative on the WHO/UNICEF Global Breastfeeding Collective (2017-2023), the Emergency Nutrition Network IFE Core Group (2017-2023), and the United States Breastfeeding Committee as Co-Steward of the COVID-19 Infant and Young Child Feeding Constellation (2020-2023). Dr. Palmquist has previously served as an International Lactation Consultants Association liaison to the United Nations (2017). Her scholarship has been featured in the New York TimesBBC News, NPR, CNN, Associated Press, National Journal, and other media outlets. It has informed national policies and global health guidance related to breastfeeding in emergencies, human milk banking, and human milk sharing.  


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