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Reproductive Life Plan Tool for Health Professionals

Doctor sitting at his desk talking with a patientRoutine health promotion activities for all women and men of reproductive age should begin with screening women and men for their intentions to have or not have a baby in the short and long term and their risk of conceiving (whether intended or not). Providers should encourage patients (women, men, and couples) to consider a reproductive life plan and educate patients about how their reproductive life plan impacts contraceptive and medical decision-making. Every woman and man of reproductive age should receive information and counseling about all forms of contraception that are consistent with their reproductive life plan and risk of pregnancy.

 

Reproductive Life Plan Tool for health professionalsTool for Health Professionals
Print out the Reproductive Life Plan Tool for health professionals to use with patients.

 

 

Reproductive Life Plan Worksheet ThumbnailWorksheet for Patients
Print out the Reproductive Life Plan Worksheet that patients can use on their own.

 

Do you plan to have any (more) children at any time in your future? (Open ended and allows branching.)


IF YES:

  • How many children would you like to have?
    (Encourages the person to consider that there is a choice about the number of children one has.)


  • How long would you like to wait until you or your partner becomes pregnant?
    (Encourages the person to vision their own future.)

    Studies have shown an association between shorter birth intervals (less than 6 months between giving birth and conception), and several adverse fetal outcomes, including low birth weight, preterm birth, and small for gestational age. Intervals of 60 months or longer had higher risks for preterm birth and very small for gestational age.1,2

    Many women are waiting until their 30s and 40s to have children. About one-third of couples in which the woman is older than 35 years have fertility problems.3


  • What family planning method do you plan to use until you or your partner are ready to become pregnant?
    (Gives the patient an opportunity to formulate and communicate a personal strategy.)

    About half of all pregnancies in the United States are unplanned. Slightly more than half of unintended pregnancies occur among women who were not using any method of contraception in the month they conceived.4


  • How sure are you that you will be able to use this method without any problems?
    (Encourages the patient to recognize that methods can have problems and to consider matching method choice to personal circumstances.)

    Contraception is highly effective; however, no method, including permanent sterilization, is perfect. In addition to nonuse of contraception, unintended pregnancies occur due to imperfect use of contraception (43%), and method failure (5%).4

 

IF NO:

  • What family planning method will you use to avoid pregnancy?
    (Gives an opportunity to formulate and communicate a personal strategy to achieve plan.)

    About half of all pregnancies in the United States are unplanned. Slightly more than half of unintended pregnancies occur among women who were not using any method of contraception in the month they conceived.4


  • How sure are you that you will be able to use this method without any problems?
    (Encourages recognition that methods can have problems and to consider matching method choice to personal circumstances.)

    Contraception is highly effective; however, no method, including permanent sterilization, is perfect. In addition to nonuse of contraception, unintended pregnancies occur due to imperfect use of contraception (43%), and method failure (5%).4


  • People’s plans change.  Is it possible you or your partner could ever decide to become pregnant?
    (Relays the message that plans can change and that it is okay, but deliberate decisions about becoming pregnant are possible and desirable.) 

 

Note to Health Professionals: Review the Clinical Content of Preconception Care for Women and Men to find out if the patient needs screening, interventions, or health education in order to be as healthy as possible, even if they’re not planning to have children.

 

Action Steps

Once your patient has a plan – encourage her or him to take action. For example, if she's decided to use the pill, ask her if she has thought about how to take the pill the same time every day; if his plan is to use condoms, ask if he has thought about how to have a useable condom available whenever needed.

Remind patients that the plan doesn’t have to be set in stone. Life is unpredictable!  So, encourage people to make a plan today, give it some thought each year, and expect to make changes along the way.

 

This Reproductive Life Plan was developed in partnership with Merry-K Moos, RN, FNP, MPH, FAAN, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is based on her webinar, "Reproductive Life Plans” (February 25, 2010) available at  http://www.beforeandbeyond.org/?page=cme-modules.

 

 

 

References

  1. Salihu HM, August EM, Mbah AK, de Cuba RJ 2nd, Alio AP, Rowland-Mishkit V, Berry EL. The Impact of Birth Spacing on Subsequent Feto-Infant Outcomes among Community Enrollees of a Federal Healthy Start Project.  J of Community Health. 2011 Jun 9. [Epub ahead of print]
  2. Grisaru-Granovsky S, Gordon ES, Haklai Z, Samueloff A, Schimmel MM. Effect of interpregnancy interval on adverse perinatal outcomes--a national study. Contraception. 2009 Dec;80(6):512-8. Epub 2009 Jul 22.
  3. CDC. http://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/Infertility/index.htm#8
  4. Frost JJ, Darroch JE and Remez L,  Improving Contraceptive Use in the United States, In Brief, New York: Guttmacher Institue, 2008, No.1.

 

 

 
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