Contraception Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Contraceptive Practice and Delivery Through Community Pharmacists: The Direct Access Study
Hormonal birth control methods include birth control pills, patches, and vaginal rings; they are normally available only with a doctor’s prescription. This study will evaluate a program designed to increase the availability of birth control by allowing pharmacists to give women hormonal birth control without a doctor’s prescription. Under this program, pharmacists will evaluate women who want to use birth control according to specific guidelines created by doctors. If a woman meets the criteria in the guidelines, a pharmacist could then give her the appropriate form of hormonal birth control.
The Institute of Medicine’s Committee on Unintended Pregnancy urges increasing access to
contraception through broadening the range of health professionals that provide birth
control. Evidence-based family planning practice no longer requires a physical examination
before prescribing hormonal contraceptives to women. Community pharmacists efficiently
provide emergency contraceptive pills (ECP) and women report satisfaction with the direct
access. These women, as well as many women purchasing less effective over-the-counter (OTC)
contraceptive methods, could benefit from more pharmacist-dispensed birth control choices,
such as hormonal methods. The Direct Access Study will assess the feasibility of
pharmacists, under Collaborative Drug Therapy Agreements with independent prescribers,
providing hormonal contraceptives in community pharmacies. Specifically, the study will
evaluate the impact upon hormonal contraception initiation and continuation rates when
women's care is managed by pharmacists.
Using Collaborative Drug Therapy Agreements jointly developed with licensed prescribers
(physicians and nurse practitioners), pharmacists in four Fred Meyer pharmacies will
identify women who are at risk of unintended pregnancy and will offer to evaluate them for
their suitability to safely use oral contraceptives, contraceptive patches, or the
contraceptive vaginal ring. Through self-administered medical and contraceptive history
questionnaires, interested women will select the most suitable contraceptive methods.
Pharmacists will then complete the screening process and prescribe hormonal contraceptives
according to the protocol guidelines.
Pharmacists will encourage women to follow up with a primary care practitioner or family
planning clinic for cervical exams and reproductive tract infection screening as indicated.
Pharmacists will have authority to provide an initial 3-month prescription and an additional
9-month prescription if blood pressure is normal at a three-month revisit. Effectiveness of
pharmacists' interventions will be measured by initiation and continuation of hormonal
methods by women to whom pharmacists have offered them. Feasibility will be determined by
measurement of both acceptability and sustainability. Acceptability will be measured by
surveys of women, pharmacists, and prescribers. Sustainability will be measured by economic
and work-flow outcomes for the pharmacies, including evidence that women, private
third-party payers, and public payers are willing to pay for the services. If safety is
documented after preliminary analysis, injectable contraceptive methods will be added to the
study.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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