Chicago Sun-Times

BIRTH CONTROL METHOD GAINING TRACTION

Long- term, reversible contracept­ion devices become more popular with teens

- BY MICHAEL TOMSIC WFAE/ Kaiser Health News Kaiser HealthN ews is a national health policy news service. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

Nurse practition­er Kim Hamm talked in soothing tones to her 14- year- old patient as she inserted a form of long- acting contracept­ion beneath the skin of the girl’s upper arm.

“This is the numbing medicine, so you’re going to feel me touch you here,” she said, taking the teen’s arm. “Little stick, one, two three, ouch. And then a little bit of burn.”

Hamm works at the Gaston County TeenWellne­ss Center, in Gastonia, North Carolina, which provides counseling, education and medical care. The teenager had already talked through her birth control options with another health care provider and chosen the implant— a flexible rod, about the size of amatchstic­k, that slowly releases low levels of hormones to prevent pregnancy.

“You’re going to feel tons of pressure here,” Hamm says, using a small device to insert the implant. “That’s it!”

And, in terms of preventing pregnancy, that will be it for the teen for the next several years.

Long- acting reversible contracept­ion methods— including implant rods and intrauteri­ne devices, or IUDs— are safe forms of birth control, and 99 percent effective, say specialist­s in reproducti­ve medicine. They are endorsed by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Congress of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts as a good line of defense against teen pregnancy.

But in the U. S., these long- acting, reversible devices are still not as frequently used by young women as elsewhere. They can be expensive, and problems with older versions of the devices— issues that have since been resolved— hurt their reputation. Only about 10 percent of American women use the devices, says Megan Kavanaugh a senior research scientist at the Guttmacher Institute, which studies reproducti­ve issues.

“Some of the other developed countries that we look at are in the high teens, maybe low 20s in terms of percentage of use,” she said.

Kavanaugh said better provider training and patient education should lead to higher usage of the long- term devices in the United States.

That’s exactly what is happening in Gaston County, N. C., where clinics have seen usage rates climb to nearly 30 percent among teens. Since 2009, all providers in Gaston County clinics have been trained to insert the devices. The county uses federal funding to help cover the cost for the uninsured, which can be roughly $ 1,000 for an IUD.

Colorado is also subsidizin­g the cost of long- acting, reversible contracept­ive methods, said Jody Camp of Colorado’s public health department, and has seen higher usage and subsequent drops in teen pregnancy and abortion.

Recently, the federal Department of Health and Human Services has started encouragin­g all states to make the methods more accessible through Medicaid, government insurance that covers many low- income women. The government is asking doctors to talk to their patients about long- acting reversible contracept­ion and allowing higher reimbursem­ent rates for the devices.

By using effective contracept­ion to space out their children, teens and other young women can help reduce the risk of delivering a premature or low- birth- weight baby, research shows. And preventing unplanned pregnancie­s can be “essential to a woman’s long- term physical and emotional well- being,” according to HHS.

There are versions of the implants that can be left in place to prevent pregnancy for five or 10 years at a stretch. But women can also choose to get them removed whenever they want and restore their fertility. Kie’Ja Phillips is from Gastonia and 19 years old. She had the three- year implant in her arm before heading to college last year.

“I do not want to have children until I’m done getting my education,” she said. “I want to be able to provide formy children and give them a stable household— financiall­y and emotionall­y and physically.”

Last year, nearly 30 percent of teens who got contracept­ion at the Gaston County clinics chose the longacting kind. Gaston County Medical Director Dr. Velma Taormina says the increased use of long- term contracept­ion is a key reason the county’s teen pregnancy rate has been dropping faster than the state as a whole. Medicaid in the state next- door— South Carolina— has also seen an increase in the use of these long- acting reversible contracept­ives. In 2012, the state implemente­d a newway of paying hospitals so medical providers could offer and insert long- acting reversible contracept­ion right after awoman gives birth, which the nation’s leading obstetrici­an’s group says can be a “particular­ly favorable time.”

B. Z. Giese is director of the South Carolina Birth Outcomes Initiative, a project within the state’s department of health and human services. Giese says the choice to have an IUD or implant inserted is always completely up to the woman, and only after she’s consulted with a health care provider. But the reason obstetrici­ans within her program started offering it immediatel­y after birth is simple: About half of women on Medicaid who gave birth weren’t showing up to their postpartum visit.

Giese calls getting the device after childbirth a win- win for the baby and the mom. “It is a cost savings,” she said. “It is a convenienc­e for the mom. The satisfacti­on rate of the moms that we know leaving the hospital is extremely high.”

 ?? THINKSTOCK­PHOTOS. COM ?? A number of states recently have dedicated more money to educating women and health care providers about long- acting, reversible forms of contracept­ion, like this intrauteri­ne device, or IUD.
THINKSTOCK­PHOTOS. COM A number of states recently have dedicated more money to educating women and health care providers about long- acting, reversible forms of contracept­ion, like this intrauteri­ne device, or IUD.
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