The incidence of unintended pregnancy has long been used as a primary indicator of the state of reproductive health. However, the definition--and therefore the measurement--of this indicator has been elusive.
Methods
Data from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) were used to compare levels of unintended pregnancy among contraceptive users based on two definitions--the standard definition based on women's reports of contraceptive failure, and the NSFG definition based on pregnancy timing (wanted then, wanted later, or not wanted then or in the future). An attitudinal scale was used to examine women's feelings about their unintended pregnancy.
Results
Of pregnancies classified as contraceptive failures under the standard definition, only 68% were unintended pregnancies--94% of those ending in abortion and 60% of those ending in birth. Just 59% of women with a contraceptive failure classified as an unintended pregnancy reported feeling unhappy or very unhappy about their pregnancy, while 90% of those with a failure classified as an intended pregnancy reported being happy or very happy.
Conclusions
Measures of wantedness based on women's feelings about their pregnancy may correlate more closely with important pregnancy outcomes than do traditional measures of intendedness. This study examines the alternative implications of the measurements of unintended pregnancy during contraceptive failure in the US. The data from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) were used to compare levels of unintended pregnancy among contraceptive users based on two definitions: the standard definition based on women's report of contraceptive failure; and the NSFG definition based on pregnancy timing. An attitudinal scale was used to examine women's feeling about their unintended pregnancy. The results of the analysis revealed 68% were unintended pregnancies under the classification of standard definition, while 59% of women with contraceptive failure classified under NSFG definition and reported feeling unhappy or very unhappy about their pregnancy. About 90% of those with contraceptive failure classified as an intended pregnancy reported feeling happy or very happy. Although these results were consistent with one another, it is still unclear why these women feeling happy about their unintended pregnancy are practicing contraception.
contraceptive failure unintended pregnancy definition measurement, National Survey of Family Growth 1995 contraceptive use, Trussell Stanford unintended pregnancy classification, pregnancy wantedness attitudinal scale contraceptive users, contraceptive failure pregnancy intendedness discrepancy, measuring unintended pregnancy reproductive health indicators, pregnancy timing wanted later unwanted definition, women happy about unintended pregnancy contraception paradox, contraceptive failure abortion versus birth outcomes, pregnancy wantedness versus intendedness survey methodology
Cite this article
Trussell, J., Vaughan, B., & Stanford, J. (1999). Are all contraceptive failures unintended pregnancies? Evidence from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth. *Family planning perspectives*, *31*(5), 246-260.
Trussell J, Vaughan B, Stanford J. Are all contraceptive failures unintended pregnancies? Evidence from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth. Fam Plann Perspect. 1999;31(5):246-260.
Trussell, J., et al. "Are all contraceptive failures unintended pregnancies? Evidence from the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth." *Family planning perspectives*, vol. 31, no. 5, 1999, pp. 246-260.
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