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Young women in China too shy to ask for
contraceptives
3 Jun 2007
Young, single women in urban China are aware of contraceptive methods but
some may be too shy to ask for them, research published in the online open
access journal BMC Health Services Research reveals.
Young women want more information, but need private and anonymous family
planning because of judgemental attitudes surrounding premarital sex and
particularly premarital pregnancy.
Encouraging contraceptive use among young migrant workers in China to
prevent pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases is no easy task,
according to the study by Xu Qian and other researchers from Fudan
University, Shanghai, China and Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, UK.
Prompted by their research published in 2004, which showed a high percentage
of urban women had experienced abortion prior to marriage, Xu Qian's team
targeted young female workers (aged 16-30) at a Shanghai mobile phone
factory. They offered lectures, information leaflets and a free workplace
contraceptive service led by the factory's doctors, who received extra
training.
The family planning information leaflets proved popular, but very few women
(5%) used the factory's free family planning service. While 100% of
participants attended the first of two lectures on reproductive physiology
and barrier methods, just over half made it to the second on oral and
emergency contraceptives and preventing sexually transmitted infections. The
women voiced concerns about using a workplace service where privacy was
compromised, and using a service without paying for it. Overriding concerns
were discomfort or embarrassment and being judged by others.
The data collected in this study questions the assumption from previous
research in China that young people lack knowledge and awareness of
effective contraception methods. The baseline data on attitudes indicated a
perceived need for contraceptive use in unmarried youth; around 90% of women
in both groups said contraceptive use was necessary in premarital sex.
Privacy, anonymity and appropriate services for the young migrant workers
may be more important in determining use of contraceptives in this
population.
In the urban migrant populations in Shanghai about half of unmarried women
have been pregnant, with 40% choosing not to attend legal clinics for safe
abortion. China's National Family Planning Program currently targets only
married couples and in privately owned factories, family planning services
are limited. The researchers suggest most young women glean information on
reproductive health from magazines and the radio.
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