Current status of unmet need for family planning
Family planning is regarded as one of the major public health successes in the past
70 years. Worldwide, the contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) for women of reproductive
age rose from 28% in 1970 to 48% in 2019 and demand satisfied rose from 55 to 79%
in the same time period (Haakenstad et al., 2022). Family planning offers both health
and social benefits for women. It saves lives by preventing unintended, unwanted and
unplanned pregnancies thereby reducing the need for abortions (that can often be unsafe
and illegal) and also by reducing the probability of a woman’s death because of causes
related to pregnancy and childbirth. In 2022, use of contraception averted more than
141 million unintended pregnancies, 29 million unsafe abortions, and almost 150,000
maternal deaths (United Nations Population Fund [UNFPA], 2022a). A number of research
studies have documented that women who have planned and adequately spaced pregnancies
give birth to healthier children and evidence also shows that expanding contraceptive
use can lead to improvements in women’s agency and labour force participation.
Universal access to family planning is a human right, central to gender equality and
women’s empowerment, and a key factor in reducing poverty and achieving the goal of
Universal Health Coverage (UHC) (Prata et al., 2017). It is a very cost-effective
public health intervention because of the high returns that it yields. Every US$1
invested in meeting the unmet need for contraceptives can yield up to US$120 in accrued
annual benefits in the long-term; US$ 30–50 in benefits from reduced infant and maternal
mortality and US$ 60–100 in long-term benefits from economic growth (FP2020, 2018).
Unmet need refers to women of reproductive age who wish to avoid a pregnancy but are
not using a contraceptive method. Despite the multiple benefits of family planning
and improvements in access, in 2019, an estimated 160 million women and adolescents
globally had an unmet need for family planning with over half of the women with unmet
need living in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia (Haakenstad et al., 2022). High unmet
need leads to high rates of unintended pregnancies and the links between unmet need
for family planning, unintended pregnancies, and unsafe abortions leading to maternal
deaths, is well established. Terminations of pregnancies indicate a high unmet need
for contraception, and unintended pregnancies have been identified as the underlying
cause for nearly all abortions, many of which are performed illegally and under unsafe
conditions.
Adolescent girls are a group that globally have substantial unmet need for contraception
that results in adverse health effects and negative consequences for their development.
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), unmet need for modern contraception is
disproportionately higher among adolescent girls aged 15–19 (43%) than amongst all
women aged 15–49 (24%). Adolescents in LMICs have an estimated 21 million pregnancies
each year, of which approximately 50% are unintended, and 55% of unintended pregnancies
end in abortions, which are often unsafe (Sully et al., 2020). Consequences of unintended
pregnancies for adolescent girls can be far-reaching, including school dropout, poor
sexual and reproductive health, cultural stigmas and social pressures, as well as
lost opportunities for employment and income in the long term.
Whilst this Special Issue uses the standard definition of unmet need, in recent years
there has been increasing debate amongst academicians and practitioners regarding
the limitations of the term. For example, unmet need does not measure whether or not
a woman wants to use a contraceptive method, yet half of the women classified as having
an unmet need report that they do not want or intend to use a contraceptive method
in the future. Should non-contraceptive use amongst these women be classified in the
same way as those women who do express a desire to use a contraceptive method? (Fabic,
2022). There is also a concern that the measurement of unmet need refers to ‘sexually
active women’ which suggest frequent, regular sexual activity which does not adequately
capture the needs of unmarried adolescent girls in temporary or short-term unions.
Furthermore, some researchers are now questioning the definition because it assumes
that all women who are using a method have had their specific needs met. However,
the current definition undercounts the number of women with a true unmet need for
contraception as it misses the many women who are using a method that does not meet
their preferences. (Rominski & Stephenson, 2019).
Barriers to service uptake that contribute to unmet need
To address unmet need for family planning, barriers to uptake need to be approached
from three perspectives: the supply, the provider and the consumer.
Availability of quality commodities
Over time, a lot of research has gone into ensuring good manufacturing practices and
setting international standards and specifications for the quality of different methods,
thereby ensuring that contraceptive supplies are of high quality. New methods have
been developed, research is continuously being promoted and the efficacy of available
methods is being improved to reduce failure rates. Similarly, governments and donors
have invested heavily in strengthening national supply chain systems, leading to improved
forecasting, procurement, distribution, data and stock handling which in turn has
helped to reduce stock outs and ensure access to quality commodities (PRB, 2013; CDC
1999).
When we consider the link between commodity availability and unmet need, it is important
to recognize that it is not just a matter of any contraceptive method being available;
the consistent availability of a range of methods is important. For example, in Asia
Pacific, there is skewed method mix in 60% of the countries in the region (i.e. a
single method accounts for 45% or more of the method mix) and there is often a disconnect
between the reason for demand and the method used (United Nations Population Division,
2015). Research has shown that in some contexts a balanced method mix combined with
a greater number of facilities can lead to a higher contraceptive uptake (Mallick
et al., 2020). However, a study across 5 countries in Africa and Asia found that stock
outs in service delivery points were highly unpredictable: whilst at least one method
was in stock at any one time, there were huge variations in frequency of stock outs
by method and type of service delivery point making it difficult for women to know
where and when to access their FP service (Muhoza et al., 2021). Other studies have
found that the public sector tends to have higher stocks out of long-acting reversible
contraceptives (LARCs) than short term methods (Githinji et al., 2022) and displaced
adolescent girls and women can be especially badly affected as when IDP camp clinics
have stock outs or close, the cost of accessing services in the public sector outside
the camp can be prohibitively high (Kagestan et al., 2017).
Quality of care
It has long been recognized that high quality, client-centred care can increase the
use of family planning, just as poor quality of care can contribute to unmet need
(Creel et al., 2002). Provider bias undermines quality of care as providers impose
unnecessary barriers to choice based on characteristics of a client, such as age,
marital status and lifestyle, or unfounded beliefs about a method (Solo & Festin,
2019). The updated FP Quality of Care framework (Jain & Hardee, 2018) identifies 6
critical elements for quality FP counselling including the availability of a trained
and competent provider, a two-way exchange of information between provider and client
and confidential, respectful interpersonal relations. Among sexually active, never-married
women, 19% cite concerns about side effects as their reason for not using a method
and 49% cite infrequent sex (Sedgh & Hussain, 2014). Therefore, quality counselling
that ensures all sexually active women understand the risk of becoming pregnant and
the range of methods available to meet their needs remains key.
Discontinuation of contraception contributes to unmet need. In 2015, globally, 38%
of women with unmet need had used a modern contraceptive method in the past but had
discontinued it, and across LMICs, up to 27% of women cited reasons for discontinuation
related to the service environment, including service quality and availability of
sufficient choice of methods (Castle & Askew, 2015).
As well as the quality of family planning counselling, evidence shows that the routine
integration of quality FP counselling into the delivery of other health services,
such as ANC/PNC visits and HIV testing, can lead to an increased uptake of family
planning, and therefore a reduction in unmet need (Amour et al., 2021; Dev et al.,
2019). However, integration needs to be done in such a way as to ensure the quality
of the family planning counselling is maintained. Where there are long waiting times,
a short time with the provider and a lack of comprehensive information about FP choices,
client dissatisfaction can be high and lead to the non-uptake of a method and therefore,
greater unmet need (Puri et al., 2020).
Lack of knowledge and awareness
Women’s lack of knowledge about contraception as a reason for non-use declined substantially
between the 1980s and the 2000s and now, in most countries, only 0–4% of married women
with unmet need demonstrate a complete lack of knowledge of family planning (Hussain
et al., 2016). However, it is important to recognize that there continue to be particular
groups of women with lower levels of knowledge of family planning and of particular
methods and that this can contribute to higher levels of unmet need among these groups.
For adolescent girls, unplanned pregnancy and STIs continue to be a major concern
globally and lack of knowledge and awareness contribute to their unmet need for contraception
(Vázquez-Rodríguez et al., 2018). Global analysis suggests that CPR at first intercourse
is under 60% (Wang et al., 2020). With reference to knowledge gaps about specific
methods, in some contexts, adolescent girls do not consider themselves eligible for
LARCs as young, unmarried women and unlike the data for adult women, higher levels
of education are not associated with higher awareness (Kirubarajan et al., 2022).
Furthermore, vulnerable sub-groups of adolescent girls are more likely to lack adequate
knowledge of contraception contributing to higher levels of unmet need. For example,
for displaced and refugee adolescent girls living in conflict- and disaster-affected
populations, knowledge of a full range of contraceptives is limited and lower than
that of adult women in the same population leading to unmet need and unintended pregnancies
(Ivanova et al., 2018). Increasing access by adolescents to comprehensive sexuality
education (CSE) could help to reduce rates of unintended pregnancy and unmet need
amongst this population (UNESCO, 2015).
For post-partum women in low- and middle-income countries, uptake of contraception
after pregnancy can be low due to an underestimation of the risk of pregnancy and
a lack of knowledge of the possible methods that can be used (Dev et al., 2019). Unmet
need for family planning has found to be higher amongst women living with HIV and
is linked to a lack of access to FP information tailored to their needs (Meckie et
al., 2021).
The importance of sustainable financing
Family planning is a critical investment for the achievement of the SDGs, an essential
health service and a basic human right that requires consistent funding year-on-year,
regardless of national and global events. Yet, as the size of national populations
increase, the cost of addressing unmet need and increasing contraceptive coverage
will rise.
One of the main challenges in accelerating the reduction of the unmet need for family
planning is the increase in the number of women of reproductive age globally, which
rose from 1.3 billion in 1990 to 1.9 billion in 2021, an increase of 46 per cent.
There was an even larger increase in the number of women of reproductive age who have
a need for family planning. More than 1 billion women of reproductive age (15–49)
live in low- and lower-middle-income countries. An estimated 371 million of those
women are now using a modern method of family planning, 87 million more than just
a decade ago. Moreover, women are demanding and using modern contraception in ever
greater numbers, in every region, despite every obstacle. Even in the face of COVID-19,
which caused enormous disruptions to health systems, the demand for modern contraception
has continued to grow (FP2030, 2022).
UNFPA (2019) estimates that it will cost $68.5bn to end unmet need for family planning
by 2030. Whilst some national governments have committed to increase domestic financing
for family planning, donor funding and out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditure continues to
account for 69% of expenditure on family planning in low- and middle- income countries
in 2019 (FP2030, 2021). It is estimated that in 2017 OOP expenditure on contraceptive
commodities in low- and middle-income countries totaled $2.09 billion (HIPs, 2018)
and the need for OOP expenditure means that the poorest can experience a financial
barrier to family planning access that leads to unmet need (Miller et al., 2018).
Following the London Summit on Family Planning in 2012, there has been an overall
trend of rising donor funding with the 2021 total approximately $200 m higher than
in 2012. However, recent years have been more challenging. Bilateral donor funding
for family planning in 2020 totaled US$1.40 billion, a drop of more than US$100 million
from 2019 and remained at more or less the same level in 2021 ($1.41 m) (Wexler et
al., 2022) and is projected to decline further over the coming decade.
The situation is challenging for middle-income countries (MICs) as major donors are
shifting funding for a range of health programmes from MICs to the poorest countries
with the highest burdens of disease. This transition in family planning donor funding
is especially challenging for those lower-middle-income countries where donor funding
is declining at a time when demand for contraception is still increasing (Pharos Global
Health Advisers, 2019).
With the decline in donor funds, domestic resource mobilization has become increasingly
important element of sustainable financing for family planning. 44 of the 48 FP2020
commitment-making countries included a domestic financing commitment and domestic
public financing is recognized as a High Impact Practice for accelerating FP uptake
(HIPs, 2018). However, a public commitment to use domestic financing is only the first
step and not all commitments have translated into actual expenditure. Budget allocation
needs to be sufficient to cover all components of a national family planning programme,
including commodities, service delivery and demand generation and to meet the needs
of the entire population (Wexler et al., 2022). The budget needs to be fully executed
-WHO (2016) estimates that between 10 and 30% of approved health budgets in Africa
are unspent—and spent efficiently.
With the political declaration at the 74th session of the United Nations General Assembly
in 2019 committing world leaders to achieve universal health coverage by 2030, the
integration of family planning into national UHC strategies as part of a broader SRHR
package of services has become a key approach to achieving more sustainable domestic
financing, and it can promote a higher mCPR and lower unmet need by reducing financial
barriers to access (Ross et el., 2018).
However, whether family planning is integrated into the national health benefits package
or funded as a vertical programme, the potential for adequate domestic financing can
be limited by the conflict with other health and non-health priorities and family
planning advocates need to demonstrate the cost-effectiveness of investing in family
planning.
During humanitarian crises, with shifting priorities, government funding is often
diverted to life-saving efforts (rescue, relief and rehabilitation) and sexual and
reproductive health services do not receive the attention they deserve (Hall et al.,
2020; Noor et al., 2022). Furthermore, even within the health care facilities, the
immediate focus is on life-saving interventions and on treating cases of the infection,
meaning that often family planning services are neglected. This was documented during
the Ebola epidemic in West Africa (Elston et al., 2017; Jones et al., 2016; Parpia
et al., 2016). In a modelling exercise undertaken by UNFPA, it was visualized that
during the early phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, the combined effects of various
programmatic factors and challenges on the availability of contraceptive services
could result in a dramatic spike in the unmet need for family planning. In the worst-case
scenario, it was projected that 32% of women of reproductive age could be unable to
meet their family planning needs in 2020, with the effects of such disruption in access
to services continuing to have an impact until the end of the decade (Sharma et al.,
2020; UNFPA, 2021a).
Gender inequality and unmet meed for family planning
Gender inequality is a key driver of unintended pregnancies. Women are more likely
to experience an unintended pregnancy when they have fewer choices and less power.
The State of World Population report 2022 reveals that gender inequality is the strongest
of all correlations of unintended pregnancy. Countries (and territories) with higher
levels of gender inequality, as measured by the gender inequality index (GII), had
higher rates of unintended pregnancy in 2015–2019 in both low- to middle-income countries
and high-income countries (UNFPA, 2022b). Many factors, rooted in gender inequality,
are stripping women of their fundamental decision-making power over their bodies.
The ability to decide whether or not to become pregnant is fundamental to bodily autonomy,
yet, globally, where data are available, only half of women aged 15 to 49 make their
own decisions regarding sexual and reproductive health and rights, about a quarter
of women are unable to say no to sex, and nearly 10% are unable to make their own
decisions about contraception (United Nations, 2022). Too often women are not able
to exercise their autonomy on these issues due to harmful social and gender norms.
Rigid gender norms and patriarchal structures that give an advantage to men over women
leave women with less power in negotiating sex, contraception, and pregnancy with
their husbands and partners. While contraceptive use is increasing throughout the
world, opposition from others, such as husbands or family members continues to be
a significant reason for women not using contraception they need (UNFPA, 2022b).
When gender inequality intersects with other forms of structural and systemic discrimination
and marginalization, it increases vulnerabilities related to unintended pregnancy.
Some marginalized groups, for example, sex workers and women with disabilities, often
face more risk of sexual violence and legal and social barriers to contraceptive use,
leading to high numbers of unintended pregnancies (Ampt et al., 2018; Faini et al.,
2020; Horner-Johnson et al., 2020; UNFPA, 2018). Inequalities in sexual and reproductive
health and rights also correlate with economic inequality. The lack of financial independence
of women limits their autonomy in choice and makes it more difficult for them to afford
contraceptive methods of choice. Within most developing countries, the unmet demand
for family planning is generally greatest among women in the poorest 20% of households.
Without access to contraception, poor women, particularly those who are less educated
and live in rural areas, are at heightened risk of unintended pregnancy (UNFPA, 2017).
Gender-based violence driven by gender-unequal power is often associated with an increase
in unintended pregnancy. Results from the WHO Multi-country study reveals that intimate
partner violence (IPV) is a consistent and strong risk factor for unintended pregnancy
and abortion across a variety of settings. Reducing IPV by 50% could potentially reduce
unintended pregnancy by 2–18% and abortion by 4.5–40%, according to population-attributable
risk estimates (Pallitto et al., 2013). In some studies, women experiencing IPV are
twice as likely to have a male partner refuse to use contraception and twice as likely
to report an unintended pregnancy compared to women who have not experienced violence
(Silverman & Raj, 2014). The risk of sexual violence and unintended pregnancies for
women and girls is exacerbated in humanitarian crises and fragile settings due to
the breakdown of normal protection structures and support, and the disruption of access
to contraceptives. One review of sexual violence among refugees and internally displaced
persons in 19 countries estimated the prevalence of sexual violence to be 21.4% based
on the 19 selected studies (Vu et al., 2014).
Overview of papers in the special issue
This special issue of China Population and Development Studies presents original research
in unmet need for contraception and unintended pregnancy including one paper from
East and Southern Africa, one paper from Bangladesh, and three papers from China.
In line with global research that has shown that particular groups of adolescent girls
and women face specific barriers to accessing services and therefore higher unmet
need, INNOCENT MODISAOTSILE et al. present research that shows the intersecting challenges
sex workers across 14 countries in East and Southern Africa faced in accessing services
during stringent COVID-19 containment measures. Whilst many women struggled to access
sexual and reproductive health services at this time, the research highlights how
the stigma that sex workers faced made it especially challenging for them to access
services and therefore, putting them at risk of unintended pregnancy. Rules limiting
mobility outside the home negatively affected the income of sex workers, whilst the
risk of strict enforcement of those rules combined with bias against sex workers made
them particularly vulnerable to violence by the police. The stigma sex workers face
was heightened during COVID-19 as they were labelled as vectors of the coronavirus.
As a result, they were often shunned by health service providers and many sex workers
were unable to access essential services such as HIV treatment, contraceptive counselling
and safe abortion services. The findings of the paper can be used to inform future
pandemic responses to ensure they are more inclusive of the specific needs of sex
workers.
Using data generated from the China Fertility Survey 2017, HUI WANG et al. analyze
unintended pregnancy and influencing factors among married women aged 15–49 in China.
The analysis found that the incidence of unintended pregnancies among married women
in China was 42.4‰ in 2017. Of women of childbearing age who had a history of pregnancy
from 2010 to 2017, 22.9% of their pregnancies were unintended. Unintended pregnancies
have a great impact on the number of induced abortions. Between 2010 and 2017, of
all unintended pregnancies, 71.9% ended in induced abortion, and only 19.9% ended
with a live birth. The incidence of unintended pregnancy and induced abortion to terminate
unintended pregnancy were higher among women who live in an urban rather than a rural
area, who previously given birth to a boy, who has a large number of children, who
are of relatively older childbearing age, or who have a shorter inter-pregnancy interval.
The analysis shows that for post-abortion contraception, only 37.3% of women chose
long-term contraceptive methods after an induced abortion caused by an unintended
pregnancy. The research finds that China’s fertility policy adjustment in 2016 had
no significant impact on the incidence of unintended pregnancy. This contradicts the
prior assumption that the loosening of the fertility policy would stimulate to a certain
extent people's desire to have children.
Using data from the 2017 China Fertility Survey, YONGAI JIN and WEIBO HU analyze associations
between women’s economic opportunities and induced abortion to test the “diverging
destinies” theory which states that women with the most economic opportunities often
obtain gains while women with the least economic opportunities suffer from losses.
Whilst between 1985 and 2014, women with more economic opportunities were more likely
to have an abortion, when the two-child policy was introduced, this trend reversed
and women with good economic opportunities become less likely to have an abortion
than women with poor economic opportunities. Unintended pregnancies place greater
pressure on economically disadvantaged, younger and unmarried women and therefore
they are more likely to seek an abortion.
Post-partum family planning (PPFP) supports healthy spacing and prevents unintended
pregnancy and yet, globally, many women do not take a family planning method after
giving birth, often because they underestimate the risk of pregnancy. YUYAN LI et
al.’s study of postpartum contraceptive use in China similarly finds that over a third
of women are not using a family planning 6 months after giving birth and a much higher
percentage of women who do not use a PPFP method experience a pregnancy within 24 months
of giving birth in comparison to those whose contraceptive demands are satisfied.
Interestingly, women who had had an abortion prior to giving birth were more likely
to not use a modern method of PPFP. The paper calls for the integration of PPFP into
the continuum of pre-natal, obstetric and post-natal care services so that all post-partum
women receive sufficient counselling on the risks of unintended pregnancy and the
benefits of family planning.
Using data from survey reports such as Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS)
2017–2018, Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) 2019, and Bangladesh Adolescent
Health and Wellbeing Survey (BAHWS) 2019–2020, and through analyzing of relevant research
papers, survey reports, and policy document, MOHAMMAD MAINUL ISLAM and MAYABEE ARANNYA
found that although Bangladesh has policies designed to support youth rights and access
to comprehensive sexuality education and relevant services, there are immense implementation
gaps. Social stigma and taboos are overpowering the implementation of policies that
need critical attention. Also, interventions are needed to address the significant
gap in data on unmarried adolescents and their use of family planning services, which
limits the analysis of the current situation of unmarried adolescents.
The five papers included in this special issue present data and analysis of unmet
need for contraception and unintended pregnancy in East and Southern Africa, Bangladesh
and China. These findings show that unmet need for contraception and unintended pregnancy
remain important public health concerns in different geographic settings, and there
are strong associations of unmet need for contraception and unintended pregnancy with
demographic, socio-economic, and cultural context variables, as observed in numerous
studies. Influencing factors such as age, social position, marriage status, children
ever born, economic status exert significant influences over unmet need for contraception
and unintended pregnancy. Findings also reaffirm that social stigma other than physical
access to services prevents women from using family planning, especially for some
marginalized groups such as sex workers and unmarried adolescents and women. There
is a need for further study and analysis of barriers including social and cultural
factors of unmet need for contraception in different social contexts to inform policies
and programs that remove obstacles and promote women and adolescent girls to enjoy
their bodily autonomy.