Simplifying NFP: preliminary report of a pilot study of the 'collar' method in Brazil

Advances in contraception : the official journal of the Society for the Advancement of Contraception, 13(2-3), 167-171

DOI 10.1023/a:1006547820310 PMID 9288334 Source

Abstract

Natural methods of fertility regulation are acceptable in most cultures. Many couples worldwide do not wish to use contraceptives or do not have access to them but wish to limit their family size or lengthen the time between births. Barriers to expanding use of natural family planning (NFP) methods include a lack of providers who can teach NFP and a lack of time to teach and follow couples during the initial months of NFP use. If simple yet effective methods of NFP are available, then NFP could be introduced to a wider audience. Recently, calendar rules have been revised that use a set interval to identify fertile days. These new rules provide better coverage of fertile days and require less abstinence than the rules traditionally used with the calendar method. One of these new rules is being field tested in a pilot study in Brazil. Couples are asked to abstain from day 9-19 (inclusive) of the menstrual cycle, using a beaded necklace (the 'collar') as a mnemonic device. Focus groups with the teacher-monitors and in-depth interviews with female and male users were carried out to evaluate the acceptability of the 'collar' method. A preliminary analysis of these focus groups and interviews from the first site is presented.

Topics

standard days method brazil, cyclebeads natural family planning, collar method fertility awareness, calendar-based nfp simplified, day 9-19 abstinence method, natural family planning pilot study, beaded necklace fertility tracking, simplified nfp developing countries, fixed fertile window calendar method, natural family planning acceptability brazil, nfp teaching barriers solutions

Cite this article

Faundes, A., Lamprecht, V., Martins Duarte Osis, M. J., & Lopes, B. C. (1997). Simplifying NFP: preliminary report of a pilot study of the 'collar' method in Brazil. *Advances in contraception : the official journal of the Society for the Advancement of Contraception*, *13*(2-3), 167-171. https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1006547820310

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