Contraceptives, Oral Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Text Message Reminders on Contraceptive Continuation, a Randomized Controlled Trial
Teen girls and young women taking birth control pills may forget to take their pills or may stop taking them altogether. This places them at risk for unintended pregnancies. Most young women own cell phones and use them for text messaging. We will test whether contraceptive continuation is affected after six months of daily text message reminders.
In 2000, there were 84 pregnancies for every 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 in the US (4). More
than 90% of the resulting 900,000 teen pregnancies were unintended (6). Nationwide, teen
pregnancy rates have dropped 28% since their peak in 1990 but dropped only 15% in Hispanic
teens (4). New York state ranks 38th in the nation with 91 teen pregnancies per 1,000 teens.
For Whites the teen pregnancy rate is only 52. Teen pregnancy rates are two to three times
higher in Hispanics (130 pregnancies) and African Americans (167 pregnancies)(4). In New
York City, the teen pregnancy rate is 99, even higher than the NY state and US rates (8).
Unintended pregnancy has long-term consequences that can disproportionately affect teens.
Teen pregnancy negatively affects a teen's socioeconomic status. Pregnant teens are less
likely to finish their education, more likely to be single parents and less likely to
acquire work experience (9). Teen pregnancies are more likely to be medically complicated,
with higher maternal and infant morbidity and mortality rates than in older pregnant women
(10). Over one third of teen pregnancies end in abortion. Once a teen has one delivery, she
is at increased risk to have another. Furthermore, a daughter of a teen pregnancy is more
likely to have a teen pregnancy herself (11). Consistent contraceptive use is the only way
to prevent pregnancy (and all of its consequences) in sexually-active teens. In a study of
OC use in our population, 99% of the pregnancies that did occur were in women who had
discontinued their OC during the study period (1).
The National Survey of Family Growth, a nationwide study examining contraceptive use in
2,271 teenagers, showed that 98% of sexually-active teenagers had used a contraceptive
method at some time (12). Among teen contraceptors, 53% use oral contraceptives (OC) - the
highest percentage among all age groups (12). The percentage of African American and
Hispanic teens using contraception is lower than white teens (12). The World Health
Organization estimates that half of patients take their medication improperly (13). One
million of the United States' unintended pregnancies result from improper OC use, failure or
discontinuation (14). Teens discontinue OCs because they experience side effects,
misunderstand instructions for use and do not establish a pill-taking routine (3). In a
study of OC use in inner city family planning clinics, we found discontinuation rates of 40%
and 61% at three and six months, respectively (1). For the 595 teens in that study,
discontinuation rates were 53% and 75% at three and six months, respectively. High
discontinuation rates are also reported elsewhere (15-19). Improving OC continuation in the
U.S. by just 10% can lead to a 7% reduction in unintended pregnancies and an annual savings
of $280 million (1995 dollars) (14). Nationally, that could mean a reduction of unintended
teen pregnancies by 63,000.
Wireless text messaging is a technology that was effective in improving medication adherence
in clinical trials of vaccines and smoking cessation in Spain and South Africa (20,21). Text
messaging has also been found to be more effective than telephone call-backs and scheduled
clinic revisits in providing patients in London with lab results and decreasing the time for
them to return to clinic for treatment (22). Cell phones have more recently become
widespread in America and cell phone use continues to increase. A 2005 survey of wireless
providers revealed that there were nearly 208 million wireless subscribers in the US, nearly
26 million more than in 2004 (23). Americans use cell phones for more than talking; they can
use the text message function to share photos, to vote for reality television programming
contestants, to receive daily jokes or to receive ring tones. Sixty-four percent of teens
with cell phones use text messaging (24). Urban teen girls are more likely to use text
messaging than boys or adults (24).
To assess cell phone use in our own population we carried out a survey of 2,521
racially-diverse reproductive-aged women, including 473 teens, attending family planning
clinics in NYC. Cell phone usage was 77% among teens, and 81% of them read and send text
messages (5). One-third of the participants in this feasibility survey worry about
forgetting to take their medications and 30% would like to receive text message reminders
for this (5). There are no studies of the effectiveness of text message reminders on
contraceptive continuation rates.
Successful teen pregnancy prevention programs use varied, multifactorial approaches (2). We
propose a study using an existing technology, text messaging, in an innovative way to
improve OC continuation rates. Daily text messages will provide information regarding side
effects, their management and instructions for troubleshooting common pill-taking mistakes.
They may also help teens and young women establish a dosing routine.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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