As many as one-third of female healthcare providers use intrauterine contraception (IUC), but only about 8 percent of US women overall do. This begs the question: Might physician self-disclosure of personal IUC use increase IUC use among patients? However, the positive or negative impact of physician self disclosure on IUC uptake or patient satisfaction is generally unknown. The purpose of this study was to evaluate if physician self-disclosure of personal IUC use increases patient use of IUC or impacts patients' satisfaction with their clinical encounter.
We performed a prospective randomized block design pilot trail of usual contraceptive counseling versus usual counseling plus physician self-disclosure of personal intrauterine contraceptive use.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
132
Physicians self-disclosed personal intrauterine contraceptive use to subjects in intervention arm of study during contraceptive counseling
all subjects recieved usual contraceptive counseling
University of Michigan Medical Center
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Intrauterine contraceptive use
All subjects were surveyed to determine use of intrauterine contraceptive immediately after their clinical visit where contraceptive counseling was received and at 2 months after their clinical encounter to assess intrauterine contraceptive use.
Time frame: immediately following clinical encounter and at 2 months
Satisfaction with clinical encounter
All subjects were surveyed to determine their with satisfaction with their overall clinical encounter immediately following their clinical encounter at at 2 months. Satisfaction was measured using a 5 point scale.
Time frame: immediately following clinical encounter and at 2 months
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