Women's Health Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of the Standard Days Method of Family Planning
The Standard Days Method® is a fertility awareness-based method of family planning in which users avoid unprotected intercourse during cycle day 8 through 19. The method is most appropriate for women with cycles that usually range 26-32 days. The clinical trial tested the contraceptive efficacy of the Standard Days Method. A total of 478 women, age 18-39 years, in Bolivia, Peru, and the Philippines, with self-reported cycles of 26-32 days, desiring to delay pregnancy at least one year were admitted to the study and followed for up to 13 cycles of method use.
The Standard Days Method® is a fertility awareness-based method of family planning. Users
avoid unprotected intercourse during cycle day 8 through cycle day 19. The method is most
effective for women with cycles that usually range 26-32 days. It was developed by applying
various formulae (i.e. various numbers of days and various sets of days) to over 7500
menstrual cycles in an existing data set from the World Health Organization, to determine
which formula would provide the optimal balance between he length of the identified fertile
period and the efficacy in avoiding unplanned pregnancy.
The purpose of the clinical trial was to test the efficacy of the method in preventing
pregnancy.
Participants were from five sites in Bolivia, Peru, and the Philippines. In all sites, the
Institute for Reproductive Health trained 5-10 health workers (service providers) in
teaching the Standard Days Method to study subjects and in study procedures. Method
provision involved a counseling session in which the woman (or the couple, if her partner
was available) was instructed in the use of the method, and counseled on the importance of
following the method recommendations to avoid pregnancy.
To assist women in monitoring their cycles, the provider gave them CycleBeads® a mnemonic
device, a string of 32 beads in which each beads represents a day of the menstrual cycle.
The first bead is red, representing the first day of menses; the next 6 beads are brown,
representing the additional non-fertile days preceding the fertile window; the next 12 beads
are white, representing days that should be considered fertile (8-19); and the remaining 13
beads are brown, again representing non-fertile days. It also has a moveable, tight-fitting
rubber ring that is used to mark the current day of the cycle. Women were instructed to
place the ring on the red bead on the day their menses began, and move the ring one bead per
day until their menses returned. They also were told that to avoid pregnancy they should not
have unprotected intercourse on the days the ring was on a white bead. If they had menstrual
bleeding before day 27 of the cycle (i.e., a cycle shorter than 26 days), or if their menses
had not occurred by the day after they completed all 32 beads (i.e., a cycle longer than 32
days), they were instructed to contact their provider for further assessment and advice.
Women who had two cycles outside the 26 through 32 day range during the study period were
advised to use another method, and were withdrawn from the study.
A total of 478 women wishing to use the Standard Days Method and meeting the eligibility
criteria were admitted to the study after signing an informed consent form and interviewed
monthly until they either completed 13 cycles of method use or left the study for other
reasons. The first level of data collection was administered by the clients themselves. Each
woman was asked to keep a daily diary to record menstrual bleeding, intercourse, and use of
any other contraceptive method. The information on the diary card was reviewed by the
clients and the service provider during each of the monthly follow-up contacts. In addition,
follow-up forms were administered, which included questions concerning method use,
satisfaction, and willingness to continue in the study.
Women who had not had their menses by day 42 of their cycle were tested for pregnancy. If
results were negative, they were followed until they tested positive or their menses
returned. Loss to follow-up was minimized by interviewing study participants in their homes
and actively seeking out each participant, with a minimum of three attempts per cycle.
Single-decrement multi-censoring life tables were used to calculate pregnancy rates.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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