PURLs

Is self-administered DMPA an answer to contraception access in the post-Roe era?

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

CAVEATS

Outcome data limited to 12 months

Although self-administered DMPA-SC has the theoretical risk for user error and incorrect administration, this study did not find increased rates of pregnancy despite administration outside a health care center. However, the total number of pregnancies in each of the 4 studies measuring this outcome was low (< 5), and thus the authors noted that the effect size estimates may not be accurate.

Currently, there are no data on long-term outcomes beyond 12 months. Additionally, the health care visits for provider-administered DMPA every 3 months may afford other benefits, such as regular discussion of reproductive health concerns or testing for sexually transmitted infections, which must be weighed against the benefit of increased contraception access with self-administration. However, using the DMPA-SC self-administered formulation at home would not inhibit women from making separate health care visits as needed.

CHALLENGES TO IMPLEMENTATION

Limited resources to teach patients how to self-inject

Barriers to implementation include limited experience with prescribing DMPA-SC and changing practice culture to offer it to patients. Additionally, successful implementation of self-administered DMPA-SC is reliant on providing patients with appropriate information and training on self-injection, which requires knowledge, time, and other resources­ that may be limited in practices. Another potential barrier is product access, as not all insurers cover DMPA-SC and some pharmacies do not carry it.

Pages

Copyright © 2023. The Family Physicians Inquiries Network. All rights reserved.

Online-Only Materials

AttachmentSize
PDF icon jfp07203084_methodology.pdf225.3 KB

Recommended Reading

Who’s at higher risk for breast cancer recurrence?
MDedge Family Medicine
U.S. vs. French guidelines for osteoporosis treatment
MDedge Family Medicine
Ovarian cancer risk lower with daily aspirin, despite genetics
MDedge Family Medicine
What impact do carbs have on bone health?
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA expands abemaciclib use in high-risk early breast cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
HER2-low breast cancer is not a separate clinical entity: Study
MDedge Family Medicine
Breast cancer surgery timing matters, but is faster always better?
MDedge Family Medicine
For young people on Medicare, a hysterectomy sometimes is more affordable than birth control
MDedge Family Medicine
Black women have higher state-level rates of TNBC
MDedge Family Medicine
Midwife-led care linked to positive outcomes across medical risk levels
MDedge Family Medicine