Influence of Contraception Use on the Reproductive Health of Adolescents and Young Adults

  • University of Calgary ROR
  • Marquette University ROR
  • Western Health Center, Midfield, AL, USA ROR

The Linacre Quarterly, 85(2), 167-177

DOI 10.1177/0024363918770462 PMID 30046195

Abstract

Oral contraceptives (OCs) are often prescribed to adolescents and young adults for the treatment of health problems and to avoid unwanted pregnancies. We hypothesized that the use of OCs, among adolescents and young adults, is associated with a greater likelihood of pregnancy, abortion, sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), and sexual behaviors that will enhance those problems (i.e., earlier sexual debut and more sexual partners) than adolescents and young adults not using OCs. To test this hypothesis, data from 1,365 adolescents and young adults in the 2011-2013 National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) were used to describe the influence of ever use of OCs on ever having sex, sexual debut, multiple sexual partners, STDs, PID, pregnancy, and abortion. A secondary purpose was to evaluate protective factors from unhealthy sexual practices like religiosity, church attendance, and intact families. We found that the "ever use" of OCs by US adolescents and young adults results in a greater likelihood of ever having sex, STDs, PID, pregnancy, and abortion compared with those adolescents and young adults who never used OCs. Furthermore, those adolescents who ever used OCs had significantly more male sexual partners than those who never used OCs, and they also had an earlier sexual debut by almost two years. Conversely, we found that frequent church attendance, identification of the importance of religion, and having an intact family among adolescents were associated with less likelihood of unsafe sexual practices. We concluded that the use of OCs by adolescents and young adults might be considered a health risk. Further research is recommended to confirm these associations.

Summary

The purpose of this article was to show the correlation between contraceptive use in adolescents and negative sexual outcomes. We used data from the 2011-2013 NSFG and demonstrated that never married adolescents who used oral hormonal contraception were three times more likely to have an STD, have PID, and to become pregnant, and, surprisingly, ten times more likely of having an abortion compared to noncontracepting adolescents. These are outcomes that contraception is intended to prevent. These data also showed that the contraceptors had significantly more male partners than their contraceptive counterparts. Protective factors such as church attendance and family cohesiveness were associated with a decreased likelihood of sexual activity.

Topics

Fehring Bouchard Meyers oral contraceptive adolescents young adults reproductive health influence, OC use adolescents STI rate infertility reproductive health outcomes associated risk, contraception prescribing adolescents acne dysmenorrhea off-label reproductive consequences, oral contraceptive use greater STI risk infertility unplanned pregnancy paradox, adolescent young adult reproductive health contraception versus NFP outcomes comparison, Linacre Quarterly 2018 contraceptive influence adolescent reproductive health, OCP masking underlying reproductive pathology endometriosis PCOS delayed diagnosis, hormonal contraception young women unintended consequences fertility awareness alternative, adolescent contraceptive counseling reproductive health outcomes longitudinal evidence, oral contraceptive cessation infertility delayed diagnosis reproductive harm young women
PMID 30046195 30046195 DOI 10.1177/0024363918770462 10.1177/0024363918770462

Cite this article

Fehring, R. J., Bouchard, T., & Meyers, M. (2018). Influence of Contraception Use on the Reproductive Health of Adolescents and Young Adults. *The Linacre Quarterly*, *85*(2), 167-177. https://doi.org/10.1177/0024363918770462

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