Preventing Unintended Pregnancy: A Pediatric
Opportunity
Prevention is the cornerstone of pediatric practice, with immunization
the prototype strategy because of its significant effectiveness in pre-
venting selected infections. Other targets of prevention such as obesity,
injuries, birth defects, and drug and alcohol use are important but lack
simple, evidence-based, and equally effective strategies. We suggest that
in response to the improvement in the effectiveness and safety of long-
acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs; eg, intrauterine devices [IUDs],
contraceptive implants), pediatricians have a special opportunity to
prevent unintended pregnancy, not only in adolescents but in all women
of childbearing age who bring their children into our offices for pediatric
care. This commentary provides information about unintended preg-
nancy and the safety and effectiveness of LARC methods. We suggest
specific opportunities for pediatricians to engage and motivate women
to actively choose their reproductive futures and when to have their
children.
One-half of the 6.7 million pregnancies in the United States each year
are unintended, 43% of which end in abortion.
1
Although the studies
have limitations, the data show that unintended live births suffer a
disproportionately high rate of maternal and infant health problems,
interfere with young mothers completing their education, and reduce
the financial and emotional resources available to support and nur-
ture existing children.
2
The cost for births resulting from unintended
pregnancies was estimated to be $11.1 billion in 2006.
3
LARC methods are the most effective, safest, and most cost-effective
reversible options to prevent unintended pregnancy. The 2 US Food
and Drug Administration–approved methods (IUDs and the contra-
ceptive implant) have higher efficacy rates compared with other re-
versible methods. The typical success rates during the first year of
use are .99% for the copper IUD, levonorgestrel IUD, and the
etonogestrel implant.
4
Birth control pills have to be remembered to
be taken daily and are 93% effective with typical use.
5
Although
physicians traditionally provide patients and parents with information
on treatment options, we would unlikely recommend a vaccine that is
93% effective when another vaccine with a similar safety profile existed
that was 99% effective like all LARC methods. These US Food and Drug
Administration–approved LARC methods are very safe for most women.
6
The contraceptive implant is one-half the cost of the contraceptive pill to
the consumer at 12 months. Cost savings of preventing an unintended
AUTHORS: Barry Zuckerman, MD,
a
Sacheen Nathan, MD,
b
and Kedar Mate, MD
c
Departments of
a
Pediatrics and
b
Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Boston University School of Medicine, Boston Medical Center,
Boston, Massachusetts; and
c
Institute for Healthcare
Improvement, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York
KEY WORDS
family planning, pediatric prevention, primary care, unplanned
pregnancy
ABBREVIATIONS
IUD—intrauterine device
LARC—long-acting reversible contraceptive
Dr Zuckerman conceptualized, drafted, and revised the
manuscript; and Drs Nathan and Mate reviewed and revised the
manuscript. All authors approved the final manuscript as
submitted.
www.pediatrics.org/cgi/doi/10.1542/peds.2013-1147
doi:10.1542/peds.2013-1147
Accepted for publication Aug 7, 2013
Address correspondence to Barry Zuckerman, MD, Department of
Pediatrics, Boston University School of Medicine/Boston Medical
Center, 771 Albany St, Dowling Building, 3rd Floor, Boston, MA
02118. E-mail: barry.zuckerman@bmc.org
PEDIATRICS (ISSN Numbers: Print, 0031-4005; Online, 1098-4275).
Copyright © 2014 by the American Academy of Pediatrics
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE: The authors have indicated they have
no financial relationships relevant to this article to disclose.
FUNDING: No external funding.
POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated
they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
PEDIATRICS Volume 133, Number 2, February 2014 181
PEDIATRICS PERSPECTIVES
by guest on February 5, 2016 Downloaded from