Volume 45, Issue 2 p. 105-122
Acknowledgments, Introduction and Overview

Unmet Need for Contraception: Issues and Challenges

John Cleland,

Emeritus Professor of Medical Demography, Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1E 7HT United Kingdom

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Sarah Harbison,

Senior Adviser for Research and Evaluation, United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Office of Population and Reproductive Health, Washington, DC.

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Iqbal H. Shah,

Director of the Center for Research and Evaluation in Reproductive Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA.

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First published: 14 June 2014
Citations: 74

Abstract

Unmet need for contraception has been a central indicator for monitoring the progress of family planning programs for 25 years. The purpose of this article is to provide a broad context for the more focused contributions that follow in this special issue. The validity and measurement of the concept of unmet need are discussed. We then present regional trends among married women since 1970. Major reductions in unmet need have been achieved, with the clear exception of sub-Saharan Africa. Less success can be claimed in addressing the needs of sexually active unmarried women, who contribute nearly 20 percent to overall unmet need in developing countries. Prominent reasons for unmet need in settings where contraceptive uptake is low include social resistance and insufficient information concerning methods. As contraceptive use increases, the importance of these reasons wanes, but concerns regarding side effects and health impact remain a barrier, and discontinued users now constitute a large proportion of those with unmet need. Drawing on these reasons, we outline measures to further reduce unmet need.

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