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A qualitative study of prescription contraception use: the perspectives of users, general practitioners and pharmacists

A qualitative study of prescription contraception use: the perspectives of users, general practitioners and pharmacists
A qualitative study of prescription contraception use: the perspectives of users, general practitioners and pharmacists
Background: The oral contraceptive pill (OCP) remains the most popular form of prescription contraception in many countries, despite adherence difficulties for many. Uptake of long acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs), which are less reliant on user adherence, remains low. The aim of this study was to explore the experiences of, and attitudes towards, prescription contraception amongst samples of contraception users, general practitioners (GPs) and pharmacists.

Methodology and Finding: We conducted a qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with 18 contraception users, 18 GPs and 9 pharmacists. The study took place in Galway, Republic of Ireland between June and September 2014. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data. Overall, contraception users were more familiar with the OCP, and all the women interviewed began their prescription contraception journey using this method. All participants identified episodes of poor adherence throughout the reproductive life course. The identified barriers for use of LARCs were lack of information, misconceptions, lack of access and high cost. In contrast, GPs believed that adherence to the OCP was good and stated they were more likely to prescribe the OCP than other methods, as they were most familiar with this option.Barriers to prescribing LARCs were time, cost to practice, training and deskilling. Pharmacists also believed that adherence to the OCP was generally good and that their role was limited to dispensing medication and providing information when asked.

Discussion and Conclusion: There are contrasting perspectives between contraception service providers and contraceptive users. Training for healthcare providers is required to support informed contraceptive choice and adherence. It is necessary to address the practice barriers of cost and lack of time, to promote better communication around adherence issues and prescription contraception options. There is a need for more easily-accessible public health information to promote awareness on all methods of prescription contraception.
1932-6203
1-13
Sweeney, Leigh-Ann
44037024-fc21-41e3-8368-ffa6ffaaa835
Molloy, Gerard
9ddaf0e6-7b4c-4f44-b100-ce4be925b288
Byrne, Molly
0a13d8f7-e440-4cbe-a305-d183109ceb01
Murphy, Andrew
59d42076-5f3d-40f5-8b32-ce995fd67371
Morgan, Karen
f9954fe8-a655-4ace-9155-5e8050715bef
Hughes, Carmel
9983735d-5e17-4f4c-be22-73c16df6267d
Ingham, Roger
e3f11583-dc06-474f-9b36-4536dc3f7b99
Sweeney, Leigh-Ann
44037024-fc21-41e3-8368-ffa6ffaaa835
Molloy, Gerard
9ddaf0e6-7b4c-4f44-b100-ce4be925b288
Byrne, Molly
0a13d8f7-e440-4cbe-a305-d183109ceb01
Murphy, Andrew
59d42076-5f3d-40f5-8b32-ce995fd67371
Morgan, Karen
f9954fe8-a655-4ace-9155-5e8050715bef
Hughes, Carmel
9983735d-5e17-4f4c-be22-73c16df6267d
Ingham, Roger
e3f11583-dc06-474f-9b36-4536dc3f7b99

Sweeney, Leigh-Ann, Molloy, Gerard, Byrne, Molly, Murphy, Andrew, Morgan, Karen, Hughes, Carmel and Ingham, Roger (2015) A qualitative study of prescription contraception use: the perspectives of users, general practitioners and pharmacists. PLoS ONE, 10 (12), 1-13. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0144074). (PMID:26633191)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: The oral contraceptive pill (OCP) remains the most popular form of prescription contraception in many countries, despite adherence difficulties for many. Uptake of long acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs), which are less reliant on user adherence, remains low. The aim of this study was to explore the experiences of, and attitudes towards, prescription contraception amongst samples of contraception users, general practitioners (GPs) and pharmacists.

Methodology and Finding: We conducted a qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with 18 contraception users, 18 GPs and 9 pharmacists. The study took place in Galway, Republic of Ireland between June and September 2014. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data. Overall, contraception users were more familiar with the OCP, and all the women interviewed began their prescription contraception journey using this method. All participants identified episodes of poor adherence throughout the reproductive life course. The identified barriers for use of LARCs were lack of information, misconceptions, lack of access and high cost. In contrast, GPs believed that adherence to the OCP was good and stated they were more likely to prescribe the OCP than other methods, as they were most familiar with this option.Barriers to prescribing LARCs were time, cost to practice, training and deskilling. Pharmacists also believed that adherence to the OCP was generally good and that their role was limited to dispensing medication and providing information when asked.

Discussion and Conclusion: There are contrasting perspectives between contraception service providers and contraceptive users. Training for healthcare providers is required to support informed contraceptive choice and adherence. It is necessary to address the practice barriers of cost and lack of time, to promote better communication around adherence issues and prescription contraception options. There is a need for more easily-accessible public health information to promote awareness on all methods of prescription contraception.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 November 2015
Published date: 3 December 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 389527
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/389527
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: afa26fae-9c8f-4a09-8e28-88abdebebe6e

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Date deposited: 09 Mar 2016 09:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 23:04

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Contributors

Author: Leigh-Ann Sweeney
Author: Gerard Molloy
Author: Molly Byrne
Author: Andrew Murphy
Author: Karen Morgan
Author: Carmel Hughes
Author: Roger Ingham

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