mHealth technologies for pregnancy prevention: A challenge for patient-centred contraceptive counselling in Dutch general practice

  • Amsterdam University Medical Centers ROR
  • IS practice ROR
  • Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences ROR
  • Duquesne University ROR
  • University of Utah ROR

The European journal of general practice, 30(1), 2302435

DOI 10.1080/13814788.2024.2302435 PMID 38264977 Source

Abstract

Background

A general practitioner (GP) standardly provides contraceptive counselling and care in the Netherlands. Recent years have seen the rise of mobile health technologies that aim to prevent pregnancy based on fertility awareness-based methods (FABMs). We lack high-quality evidence of these methods' effectiveness and clarity on how healthcare professionals include them in contraceptive counselling.

Objectives

To analyse how Dutch healthcare professionals include pregnancy-prevention mobile health technologies (mHealth contraception) in contraceptive counselling and to propose practice recommendations based on our findings.

Methods

We used ethnographic methods, including semi-structured interviews with nine professionals who were recruited using purposive sampling, 10 observations of contraceptive counselling by four professionals, six observations of teaching sessions in medical training on contraception and reproductive health, one national clinical guideline, and seven Dutch patient decision aids. Data were collected between 2018 and 2021 and analysed inductively using praxiographic and thematic analysis.

Results

In contraceptive counselling and care, professionals tended to blend two approaches: 1) individual patient-tailored treatment and 2) risk minimisation. When interviewed about mHealth contraception, most professionals prioritised risk minimisation and forewent tailored treatment. Some did not consider mHealth contraception or FABMs as contraceptives or deemed them inferior methods.

Conclusion

To minimise risk of unintended pregnancy, professionals hesitated to include mHealth contraception or other FABMs in contraceptive consultations. This may hamper adequate patient-centred counselling for patients with preference for mHealth contraception.Based on these results, we proposed recommendations that foster a patient-tailored approach to mHealth contraceptives.

Topics

mHealth pregnancy prevention contraceptive counselling Dutch, fertility awareness app contraception general practice, Algera Leusink mHealth technologies contraception Netherlands, mobile health apps fertility tracking contraceptive counselling, digital fertility awareness tools patient-centred counselling, European Journal General Practice mHealth contraception 2024, smartphone app fertility awareness Dutch general practitioners, digital contraception tools GP counselling challenge, natural cycles apps contraceptive method counselling
PMID 38264977 38264977 DOI 10.1080/13814788.2024.2302435 10.1080/13814788.2024.2302435

Cite this article

Stanford, J. B., & Duane, M. (2023). Physicians Need Education About Fertility Awareness-Based Methods. *American Family Physician*, *108*(3), 225-226.