American Journal of Men's Health (Jan 2016)

Family Planning and Preconception Health Among Men in Their Mid-30s

  • Frances E. Casey MD, MPH,
  • Freya L. Sonenstein PhD,
  • Nan M. Astone PhD,
  • Joseph H. Pleck PhD,
  • Jacinda K. Dariotis PhD, MAS,
  • Arik V. Marcell MD, MPH

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988314556670
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Healthy People 2020 call for improvements in meeting men’s reproductive health needs but little is known about the proportion of men in need. This study describes men aged 35 to 39 in need of family planning and preconception care, demographic correlates of these needs, and contraception use among men in need of family planning. Using data from Wave 4 (2008-2010) of the National Survey of Adolescent Males, men were classified in need of family planning and preconception care if they reported sex with a female in the last year and believed that they and their partner were fecund; the former included men who were neither intentionally pregnant nor intending future children and the latter included men intending future children. Men were classified as being in need of both if they reported multiple sex partners in the past year. About 40% of men aged 35 to 39 were in need of family planning and about 33% in need of preconception care with 12% in need of both. Current partner’s age, current union type, and sexually transmitted infection health risk differentiated men in need of family planning and preconception care (all p s < .01) and participants’ race/ethnicity further differentiated men in need of preconception care ( p < .01). More than half of men in need of family planning reported none of the time current partner hormonal use (55%) or condom use (52%) during the past year. This study identified that many men in their mid-30s are in need of family planning or preconception care.