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US Office of Population Affairs

Contraceptive Care - Access to LARC

  • Percentage of women aged 15-44 years at risk of unintended pregnancy that is provided a long-acting reversible method of contraception (i.e., implants, intrauterine devices or systems (IUD/IUS)).

    It is an access measure because it is intended to identify very low rates (less than 1-2%) of long-acting reversible methods of contraception (LARC), which may signal barriers to LARC provision.

    CBE ID
    2904

Contraceptive Care - Postpartum

  • Among women ages 15 through 44 who had a live birth, the percentage that is provided:
    1) A most effective (i.e., sterilization, implants, intrauterine devices or systems (IUD/IUS)) or moderately (i.e., injectables, oral pills, patch, or ring) effective method of contraception within 3 and 60 days of delivery.

    2) A long-acting reversible method of contraception (LARC) within 3 and 60 days of delivery.

    CBE ID
    2902

Contraceptive Care – Most & Moderately Effective Methods

  • The percentage of women aged 15-44 years at risk of unintended pregnancy that is provided a most effective (i.e., sterilization, implants, intrauterine devices or systems (IUD/IUS)) or moderately effective (i.e., injectables, oral pills, patch, or ring) method of contraception.

    The measure is an intermediate outcome measure because it represents a decision that is made at the end of a clinical encounter about the type of contraceptive method a woman will use, and because of the strong association between type of contraceptive method used and risk of unintended pregnancy.

    CBE ID
    2903