Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2024)

Sociodemographic and Medical Characteristics of Women Applied for Emergency Contraception—A Retrospective Observational Study

  • Richárd Tóth,
  • Lotti Lőczi,
  • Marianna Török,
  • Attila Keszthelyi,
  • Gergő Leipold,
  • Nándor Ács,
  • Szabolcs Várbíró,
  • Márton Keszthelyi,
  • Balázs Lintner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13061673
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. 1673

Abstract

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Background: Lifestyle factors significantly impact overall health. Our aim was to assess reproductive health awareness among patients who applied for emergency contraceptive pills. Methods: This present retrospective observational study between July 2021 and September 2021 is embedded in the MEEC (Motivation and Epidemiology of Emergency Contraceptive Pill) based on the study cohort of a Hungarian data bank containing follow-up data of 447 women who applied for EC telemedicine consultation. Collected data: age, history of previous pregnancy, lifestyle factors like smoking, alcohol consumption, sexual characteristics: partner consistency and protection during intercourse, cervical cancer screening within the past 2 years, previous HPV screening, and the preference for future contraceptive methods. The investigation also compiled accurate data on intercourse (elapsed time to request a medical consultation). Lifestyle factors were scored. Results: The more health-conscious patients were quicker to report for a post-event pill. Earlier pregnancies and older age were associated with greater reproductive health awareness. Conclusions: Reproductive health awareness is increased by previous pregnancies and older age. More health-conscious women consult a doctor earlier, which can reduce the chance of various health damage. Our study emphasizes the significance of lifestyle factor influence on reproductive health decisions.

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