The Standard Days Method is a fertility awareness-based method of family planning in which users avoid unprotected intercourse during cycle Days 8 through 19. A prospective multi-center efficacy trial was conducted to test, in a heterogeneous population, the contraceptive efficacy of the Standard Days Method. A total of 478 women, age 18-39 years, in Bolivia, Peru, and the Philippines, with self-reported cycles of 26-32 days, desiring to delay pregnancy at least one year were admitted to the study. A single decrement multi-censoring life table analysis of the data indicate a cumulative probability of pregnancy of 4.75% over 13 cycles of correct use of the method, and a 11.96% probability of pregnancy under typical use. This article describes the study and the results. Results suggest that despite its requirement that couples modify their sexual behavior when the woman is fertile, the Standard Days Method provides significant protection from unplanned pregnancy and is acceptable to couples in a wide range of settings.
Standard Days Method efficacy contraceptive fertility awareness, fertility awareness based method cycle days 8-19 fertile window, Arévalo Jennings Standard Days Method prospective trial, natural family planning typical use correct use pregnancy rates, Standard Days Method CycleBeads contraceptive efficacy, fertility awareness method 26-32 day cycle length, natural family planning multicenter prospective efficacy trial, calendar-based fertility awareness contraceptive method Bolivia Peru Philippines, periodic abstinence method life table pregnancy probability, fertility awareness contraception developing countries multicenter study
PMID 12057784 12057784 DOI 10.1016/s0010-7824(02)00288-3 10.1016/s0010-7824(02)00288-3
Cite this article
Arévalo, M., Jennings, V., & Sinai, I. (2002). Efficacy of a new method of family planning: the Standard Days Method. *Contraception*, *65*(5), 333-338. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0010-7824(02)00288-3
Arévalo M, Jennings V, Sinai I. Efficacy of a new method of family planning: the Standard Days Method. Contraception. 2002;65(5):333-338. doi:10.1016/s0010-7824(02)00288-3
Arévalo, M., et al. "Efficacy of a new method of family planning: the Standard Days Method." *Contraception*, vol. 65, no. 5, 2002, pp. 333-338.
A significant number of women worldwide use periodic abstinence as their method of family planning. Many of them use some type of calendar-based approach to determine when they should abstain from unp...
Family planning is often regarded as the woman's responsibility, but there is growing recognition of the need to involve men in family planning programs. Since 2001, the fertility-awareness-based Stan...
Fertility Awareness > Methods > Standard Days MethodFertility Awareness > Education > Male Partner EngagementGeneral OB/GYN > Family Planning > Couple-Based Approaches
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