Introduction
Contraceptive use was a contentious issue during the course of the 19th century with
it being illegal to provide contraception information in the US well into the 20th
century.1,2 In a rapid about-face, the period that followed was marked by the introduction
of several birth control methods as well as a feverish stage of contraceptive research
and development.3 The impetus for the innovations in birth control technology was
provided by Margaret Sanger, whose activism paved the way for the landmark 1965 Supreme
Court case Griswold v. Connecticut which overturned the ban on contraceptives for
married couples.4 In the 1900s, the family planning movement took hold in the US,
during a period of intense concern over the socio-economic consequences of overpopulation,
poverty, and insecurity, as foretold by Malthus more than two centuries ago.4
As early as the second decade of the twentieth century, organizations, such as the
International Labor Organizations had declared “Poverty anywhere is poverty everywhere”.5
Partly as a measured defense against security concerns, Dr Reimert Ravenholt, the
first director of the Office of Population at the US Agency for International Development
(USAID), and Global family planning assistance program spearheaded a massive international
family planning program primarily to contain poverty.6 He oversaw the disbursement
of nearly 1.4 billion dollars for family planning programs worldwide during his 14
years at the office, 1965–1979. According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA),
the largest bilateral donor of family planning assistance in 2018 was the United States,
followed by the United Kingdom and Sweden.7
Nearly six decades since the entry of the family planning program on the world stage,
the original mission of provision of suitable contraception for all women of reproductive
age has not yet been realized. Furthermore, the family planning program vision as
stated in SDG 3.7.1 was to guarantee all women currently aged 15 to 45 universal access
to family planning information and education and sexual and reproductive health-care
services under the national development strategies and programs.8 These targets are
far from being met resulting in high levels of unmet need among women in reproductive
age groups in developing countries.
According to new estimates for the year 2019, sexual and reproductive health services
in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are inadequate to meet the needs of their
populations. The estimates for low- and middle-income countries indicate that approximately
218 million women of reproductive age (between 15 and 49 years old) have an unmet
need for modern contraception. Furthermore, about 49% of pregnancies in LMICs, which
amounts to 111 million annually, are unintended.9 In West & Central Africa, low coverage
coexists alongside high unmet family planning.10–13 Family planning programs in LMICs,
such as India, have responded to high levels of unmet need through an array of measures,
such as improving the variety and mix of contraceptive methods; enhancing the availability,
accessibility, and affordability of contraceptives; and boosting the capacity among
family planning workers to connect with women from marginalized communities and respond
to their family planning needs.14
These measures appear to have only marginally yielded anticipated results, in light
of the fact that the percentage of women with unmet needs for family planning globally
has remained steady at about 10%, over the last two decades.15 Subsequently, a large
proportion of women in reproductive age groups have been driven to the use of permanent
methods of contraception. According to NFHS-5 data, 50% of currently married women
in India are utilizing modern contraceptive methods, while 38% exclusively rely on
female sterilization.16
While improving the availability and accessibility of family planning services is
crucial to decreasing the unmet need for contraception, it is insufficient in and
of itself. While supply-side interventions, such as increasing the availability of
contraceptives have been effective in increasing contraceptive use in developing countries,
the impact of these interventions has been limited.17 The authors suggest that this
is because demand-side factors, such as individual-level beliefs, attitudes, and preferences
towards contraception have not been adequately addressed. While there has been extensive
research on the socio-demographic factors that influence contraceptive use, there
has been relatively little research on the individual-level factors that affect contraceptive
use.18 A person-centered approach to understanding contraceptive use can help to identify
the multilevel factors, which takes into account the individual-level factors that
may influence contraceptive use, as well as the broader social, cultural, and economic
factors that may contribute to unmet need and inform the development of more effective
programs to reduce unmet family planning need in developing countries.19,20
Moreover, medical problems like infertility, chronic illness, or disabilities can
either restrict an individual’s ability to use contraception or raise their need for
particular types of contraception. For instance, certain medical conditions may require
women to use specific types of contraceptives, and not doing so can lead to negative
health consequences. Furthermore, the concern about the potential adverse effects
of hormonal contraception on reproductive tract infections has been identified as
a noteworthy contributor to the decision to not use contraception.21 Addressing reproductive
health problems and providing specialized family planning services can help to decrease
the unmet need for family planning. Despite this, the significance of reproductive
health problems as a compelling cause of contraceptive use decision-making is less
recognized compared to supply and demand side factors. In several developing regions
such as Uttar Pradesh in India, the prevalence of Reproductive Tract Infections/Sexual
Tract Infections among women aged 15–45 has been reported as high as 52.2%.22 Globally,
4 in 100 women in reproductive age (15 −45) suffer from one of the four STIs, which
include trichomoniasis, bacterial vaginosis, chlamydia, and gonorrhea.23 The importance
of reproductive health concerns in relation to reproductive rights and contraceptive
decision-making by women, as well as the role of service agencies in meeting women’s
family planning requirements, was initially addressed during the 1994 Beijing Conference.
The Beijing 1994 meeting, also known as the International Conference on Population
and Development (ICPD), played a significant role in highlighting the importance of
family planning and reproductive rights in improving global reproductive health. The
conference recognized that reproductive health encompasses not only the physical but
also the mental and social well-being of individuals in relation to their reproductive
system and processes. Reproductive rights, on the other hand, emphasize the individual’s
right to make informed choices about their reproductive health, including the right
to access and use contraception, seek family planning services, and make decisions
about the timing, number, and spacing of their children. The link between reproductive
health and reproductive rights lies in the fact that access to comprehensive family
planning services, including information, education, and contraception, empowers individuals
to make informed choices about their reproductive health, which can have positive
impacts on their overall well-being and contribute to improved reproductive health
outcomes globally.
This focus on reproductive health and rights emerged with the Post-2015 development
agenda from the convergence of three streams of development goals: the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development (Rio 1992), the International Conference
on Population and Development (ICPD 1994), and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
The Post-2015 agenda placed a new emphasis on family planning programs that cater
to the demand for contraceptive use, based on the principles of reproductive rights.24
The goal was to provide rights-based family planning programs that prioritize individual
and couples’ choices and needs.
The study of the demand for contraceptive use among women of reproductive age requires
well-defined theoretical and methodological approaches that take into account the
diverse utilities associated with this behavior. This entails examining how these
utilities change over time, considering the multilevel effects of individual-level
physical and mental health, as well as the meso and macro-level effects of the environment
on contraceptive use in different populations.25
Furthermore, it is essential to adopt a person-centered perspective and consider reproductive
health issues that women face over time. For instance, the transition from childhood
to adolescence is often fraught with uncertainties and may be influenced by unpleasant
memories and experiences from childhood, which can impact the smooth and healthy progression
into the teenage years. Therefore, a comprehensive understanding of contraceptive
use must consider the broader reproductive health context in which women navigate
these transitions in life stages.
The cumulative and interactive effects of mental and physical health risks during
childhood may unduly limit teenagers’ capacity to make contraceptive use decisions
and to effectively plan births during later years.26,27 Lack of research on the identification
of such pathways necessary for building capacity for effective contraceptive use remains
limited.
Though there has been extensive research on unmet family planning needs focusing on
the role of socioeconomic and cultural factors, studies on the inter-relatedness of
determinants of contraceptive use as they relate to past and present use are few and
far between.28 In most LMICs, as women enter into marriage, they are faced with several
familial expectations such as the number of desired children and the number of male
children which impact contraceptive use decision-making.
Understanding the Complexities of Women’s Contraceptive Decision-Making
The interrelatedness of many social and individual factors that influence contraceptive
use, as well as the pattern of change in the causative factors over time, constrain
women’s life-stage dependent contraceptive choices. For example, as women age, decisions
with respect to starting and spacing children over time are impacted by their past
as well as present experiences of social, economic, and physical well-being. Edmeades,
Lee-Rife and Malhotra,29 and Edmeades30 observe that the current research on contraceptive
use is limited to our narrow understanding of how and why temporary contraceptive
methods change over the course of women’s lives. Current theories of unmet family
planning have not yet developed an adequate framework to systematically identify the
independent, cumulative, and interactive effects of social, health, economic, and
life stage-related influences pertaining to contraceptive decision-making and use.31,32
The difficulties facing current programs and policies to reduce unmet need call for
new conceptual schemes that enable women to build the capacity to make healthy contraceptive
use decisions, thus taking into consideration the health and social relationship histories
across life stages. In this regard, there are three theoretical approaches, which
suggest a number of micro, meso, and macro-level factors associated with pregnancy
and fertility intentions underlying unmet needs. Two of the models are rooted in social
scientific disciplines, such as sociology and demography, and the third is a medical
model.
The first approach takes into account the direct and indirect effects of environmental
factors that influence fertility control during the course of a specific period into
which women are born, socialized, and plan births. This approach is broadly referred
to as the cohort–historical model. The cohort-historical model proposes that the processes
whereby people are born, live out their lives, and are replaced in a society, underlie
social changes such as shifts in fertility and trends in opinions and values. Social
change is seen as stemming from the fresh contacts new cohorts make with contemporary
social heritage.33 The interaction between new cohort members and the existing social
system makes it possible for the social system to influence the members’ characteristics.
Conversely, the cohort members may bring about new rules of behavior and/or alter
the environment so as to fulfill social and economic needs. Such normative and environmental
changes, along with changes in the size of the cohorts can bring about inter-cohort
differences in terms of starting, spacing, and stopping childbearing. For example,
young men born in the early fifties returning from World War II found a robust socio-economic
environment with plenty of job opportunities. Encouraged by the presence of a strong
economy, many not only started having children early but also paced them slightly
faster than their counterparts a generation earlier. This approach explicitly considers
the impact of women’s age as well as the birth cohort.33,34
The second approach broadens the cohort–historical model by taking into consideration
the accumulated effects of reproductive health experiences as well as gains and losses
with respect to building the capacity to achieve desired family size. The framework
helps explain how the structure and quality of women’s social relationships change
across life stages and how these independently, cumulatively, and interactively influence
and build women’s capacity for healthy contraceptive use over time.
This approach is labeled “life course” since it takes into consideration a number
of social, economic, psychological, and environmental forces impinging on individuals
going through various life stages. The life course is indicated by multilevel, interdependent
past and current events, some of which have a significant and abiding influence on
the individual.35,36 Life course theory segments the life course into several trajectories.
Each trajectory is made up of interrelated events, actions, and incidents shaping
long-lasting involvement with social institutions, such as marriage and family. These
trajectories which either occur or are timed as per social expectations are often
age-related. Within a trajectory, individuals may likely experience such events as
social roles and status changes referred to as transitions. Some of these transitions
may significantly modify the trajectory resulting in “turning points” in an individual’s
life inciting significant priority-based decisions.
The journey through life stages is accompanied by a focus on generating subjective
well-being and maintaining social relations. More importantly, the passage through
life stages is marked by accomplishing socially accepted goals at desired intervals
against ongoing social, economic, and political changes.
Within these broad-level changes, individuals live out their lives responding to norms
and values with respect to several aspects of their being including family formation
involving contraceptive decisions with respect to starting, spacing, and stopping
childbirth. As reproductive careers unfold, social relationships within the household
may change contributing to dynamic modifications in power relationships linked to
accessibility to contraceptives. In addition, variations in health status also may
impact contraceptive use decisions.
The third came about as a product of a long history of involvement of the medical
community in the development and promotion of contraception as a widely used modern
medical method to plan family formation as well as to improve reproductive health.
While the socio-historical and the life course models remained within the confines
of the social sciences; sociology and demography in particular, the emphasis was mostly
on socio-economic and environmental determinants. This to some extent resulted in
the dearth of efficient research designs to explain contraceptive use behavior considering
the likely susceptibility to illness and contagions that have emerged over time. Not
surprisingly, this also led to a focus on the observation of environmental factors
as well the biological ones over time. This approach has now culminated in the development
of life-course epidemiology based on the premise that biological and social factors
operating over time and across life stages influence likely occurrences of disease
as well as health behaviors.37–39
This focus has resulted in scrutinizing contraceptive use within the life stage-specific
etiology of diseases. At the epidemiological level, the incorporation of the life
course approach has contributed to the development of life course epidemiology; the
study of the contribution of biological and social factors acting independently, interactively,
and cumulatively, therefore impacting health outcomes such as contraceptive use.
A summary of the differences and similarities among the precepts of Cohort-historical;
Life Courseand Life course Epidemiological Models is presented in Table 1.
Table 1
Similarities and Dissimilarities Among the Cohort-Historical; Life Course, and Life
Course Epidemiological Models
Similarities
Cohort-historical vs Life Course Model.
Cohort-historical vs Life course Epidemiological Model.
Life Course Model vs Life Course Epidemiological Model.
Both models emphasize that an individual’s experiences are shaped by the social and
historical context in which they live. They both recognize the importance of longitudinal
data in understanding how individuals’ experiences change over time.
Both models emphasize the importance of shared experiences and common historical events
among a group of individuals, while the life course model emphasizes the importance
of individual experiences and transitions over time.
Both models view health as being shaped by an individual’s experiences and exposures
over their lifetime. They both recognize the importance of social and environmental
factors in shaping health outcomes, including things like income, education, and neighborhood
conditions.
Dissimilarities
The cohort historical model focuses on understanding the impact of historical events
on a particular cohort or generation, while the life course model focuses on understanding
how individual experiences over their lifetime affect their health outcomes.
The cohort historical model tends to focus more on understanding broad historical
trends, while the life course epidemiological model tends to be more focused on identifying
and measuring specific exposures and outcomes.
The life course epidemiological model is more focused on identifying specific exposures
and outcomes related to health, while the life course model is more focused on understanding
how individual experiences over time contribute to health outcomes.
The cohort historical model emphasizes the importance of shared experiences and common
historical events among a group of individuals, while the life course model emphasizes
the importance of individual experiences and transitions over time.
The cohort historical model does not explicitly consider the biological and physiological
changes that occur over the life course, while the life course epidemiological model
takes these factors into account.
The life course model focuses on the timing of exposures and experiences over the
course of a person’s life, while the life course epidemiological model emphasizes
the accumulation of exposures and experiences over time.
Instead of positioning contraceptive use as an independent isolated event, the life
course epidemiological view takes into consideration the dynamic process of family
formation modulated through contraceptive use while being exposed to the cumulative
intrinsic as well as socio-economic and environmental factors impinging on women’s
capabilities throughout the course family formation and beyond.
The disparate and somewhat independent development of these theoretical approaches
have not yet been impactful on the unmet family planning need research which has been
molded by feminist and human rights values to focus on reproductive health aspects
more than on population development objectives.40 In essence, research on unmet needs
calls for investigative studies on the determinants of unmet needs to focus on the
impact of the procedural nature of events including life events differentiated by
life stages and life courses.
Though the well-known and well-utilized social determinants approach toward identifying
direct factors related to unmet needs41 has indeed proven useful, the same research
outcome enunciated by a life course perspective may unfold far more information hidden
in the complex relationships among selected determinants of unmet needs.30,42 Consider
the use of indicators, such as pregnancy/fertility intention of unmet family planning
needs. As indicators of unmet family planning needs, information on “fertility intentions”
is sought when the researcher’s interest is in exploring the desired number of children.
Pregnancy intentions are of importance if the objective is to reduce the number of
unwanted pregnancies and induced abortion; clearly, a reproductive health objective.
Responses on intentions could be clear and firm, neutral, or ambivalent. Clarity on
intentions may be dependent upon a number of socio-psycho-biological factors impacting
contraceptive use decisions. A life course perspective is suitable for extracting
the information necessary to promote efficient contraceptive use.
Furthermore, such an approach is of relevance to the human rights agenda underlying
the reproductive health perspective on unmet family planning needs. For example, life
stage as well as life course epidemiological studies on the effect of son preference
on abortion unraveled a far more expansive reproductive health effect than on abortion.29,43
Edmeades, Lee Rife & Malhotra13,14 examined the effect of past life course experiences
on contraceptive use and abortion. They utilized the life course perspective to systematically
examine factors influencing changes in contraceptive use patterns and found that abortion
attempts have over time effects across life stages on contraceptive use. In addition,
there are several methodological issues, which need to be considered in tandem with
the theoretical views on the concept of unintended pregnancy to grasp the utility
of life course and the life course epidemiological to strengthen research on unmet
family planning needs.
Implications for Family Planning Capacity Building
Family planning programs have played an important role in addressing the issue of
unmet needs in LMICs.44–48 Community Health Family Planning workers have effectively
increased the use of modern contraception.49,50 This approach has increased reliance
and dependence on researchers of unmet needs, and policymakers to generate a large
amount of knowledge to help guide family planning workers.26,51 In this regard, life
course and life course epidemiological approaches are helpful in generating data to
help women improve contraceptive use capacities. Greater exploration of women’s views
on their contraceptive use needs and expectations could lead to increased knowledge
and more effective discussions with family planning workers and healthcare providers
resulting in a greater likelihood of informed contraceptive choice.
Though the objective and goals of research on unmet family planning needs may differ
across a wide spectrum and context in which research is undertaken, the life course
framework provides guidance with regard to categorizing and organizing information.36,52–54
For example, the Cohort historical model and life course approaches suggest gathering
information on a number of current and past demographic attributes and individual-level
risk, and protective factors. The risk factors expose and increase barriers to acquiring
and building contraceptive use capabilities. The protective factors improve an individual’s
contraceptive use capabilities.
In this regard, Kuh37,55 proposes a number of suggestions for data generation within
the ambit of life course epidemiology. Such data may include information on place
of residence at birth, age, class, ethnicity, and family or origin. The data on life
stage-specific characteristics may include, information on specific events of significance;
both risk and protective to the individual in terms of bringing about long-lasting
effects. A focus on events that can be considered “turning points” is valuable. In
case of illness, information on duration, and time of occurrence is useful Data related
to this dimension may focus on relevant exposure that may intensify or abate past
and current risk and protective factors linked to contraceptive use capability. Researchers
may ask if there are “transitions” and “turning points”, such as status changes that
may be associated with either intensification or abatement of risk and protective
factors. Data related to the onset of illness and factors that either intensify or
reduce individuals’ assessment of contraceptive use capability as well as data on
risk and protective factors that influence capacity and resilience to overcome barriers
and promote contraceptive use capability can be potentially useful for family planning
counselors and workers.
Discussion
The global vision of meeting the need for family planning among women of reproductive
ages has not yet been realized even as supply-oriented strategies have been successful
in improving the availability and access to family planning services. But this alone
is not enough to address the unmet need for family planning. A person-centered approach
that considers multilevel factors can help inform the development of more effective
family planning programs. In this respect, the impact of life events and reproductive
health problems loom large significantly influencing contraceptive use decisions.
By taking a life course perspective, researchers can identify individual-level, social
and cultural, and structural factors that may influence family planning decisions
and develop tailored interventions that meet the specific needs of individuals and
populations at different stages of life.
For example, studies utilizing life course theory have investigated the psychological
and social impact of reproductive health problems and found that contraceptive use
interventions may need to be tailored to the specific needs of women at different
life stages.
By addressing unmet family planning need early in the life course, these frameworks
can help prevent long-term reproductive health consequences associated with unintended
pregnancies and promote better health outcomes for both individuals and their families.
A more intersectional approach to research that considers the social and cultural
contexts in which women’s reproductive health decisions are made is also necessary
to address the gaps in our understanding of unmet family planning need in developing
countries.
In general, research on unmet family planning needs is essential to achieve several
targets under the reproductive health objectives related to SDG 3.7.1 goals. Studies
using developmental theoretical frameworks are likely to be useful for strengthening
the role of family planning workers throughout the developing world. In this regard,
this is a clarion call for a broader range of research on unmet family planning needs.
Family planning programs focused on reducing unmet need still remains our best course
of action to achieve several targets under the reproductive health objectives related
to SDG 3.7.1 goals. Research studies on unmet family planning needs using developmental
theoretical frameworks are likely to be useful for strengthening the role of family
planning workers throughout the developing world.