
Birth control offers women the opportunity to prevent pregnancy, plan and space their births, or have no births at all. And yet, in the United States, half of all pregnancies remain unintended, and access to birth control is beset by inequities in education, access, and coverage.Research indicates that women are familiar with the range of contraceptive methods available today. But the persistently high rates of unintended pregnancy, combined with common dissatisfaction and discontinuation, suggest that women's contraceptive needs continue to be unmet.Birth Control: What Everyone Needs to Know® will offer more than a user's guide to available means of contraception: it will examine how supported family-planning infrastructure impacts society as a whole. Through reviews of policy, scientific literature, and supplemental interviews with women, it will uncover women's concerns and apprehensions about contraception, as well as the ways birth control empowers women and increases access to educational and professional opportunities. It will provide an overview the history of birth control, the risks and benefits of contraception, the role of menstruation, and the future of birth control. The goal of this book is to provide accurate, unbiased scientific information about contraception in the context of women's lived experiences and the realities of how individuals make decisions about birth control.
This book investigates the persistent gap between the availability of contraceptive methods and the high rates of unintended pregnancy in the United States. Authors Beth L. Sundstrom and Cara Delay utilize a multidisciplinary approach, combining public health policy analysis, historical context, and qualitative interviews to examine how systemic infrastructure influences individual reproductive decision-making. The text argues that contraceptive success depends not only on clinical efficacy but also on addressing the socioeconomic and cultural barriers that prevent equitable access.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and public health professionals recognize this work as a comprehensive synthesis of the social and scientific dimensions of reproductive health. Readers frequently note that the prose balances academic rigor with accessible language, making it a useful resource for both students and the general public.
Page Count:
218
Publication Date:
2020-07-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190069678
ISBN-13:
9780190069674
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