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Assessing the Contraceptive Attitudes of US-Born and Foreign-Born Black Women Living in the USA: a Descriptive Cross-Sectional Study

Olorunsaiye, Comfort Z.; Brunner Huber, Larissa R.; Degge, Hannah M.; Yada, Farida N.; Yusuf, Korede K.

Authors

Comfort Z. Olorunsaiye

Larissa R. Brunner Huber

Profile image of HANNAH DEGGE

Dr HANNAH DEGGE Hannah.Degge@nottingham.ac.uk
Assistant Professor in Health Promotionand Public Health

Farida N. Yada

Korede K. Yusuf



Abstract

Background
Racially and ethnically marginalized US women experience unintended pregnancy at twice the rate of White women. Understanding contraceptive attitudes can help identify women at increased risk of contraceptive non-use and unintended pregnancy. We assessed the contraceptive attitudes of US-born and foreign-born Black women and examined differences by nativity.

Methods
We used an electronic survey, implemented by Lucid LLC, a consumer research firm, to collect cross-sectional data from 657 reproductive-aged women. Analysis was limited to 414 Black women aged 18–44 years. The exposure variable was nativity (US-born or foreign-born), and the outcome variable was cumulative score on the 32-item Contraceptive Attitude Scale (CAS). Analysis included multivariable linear regression, adjusted for confounders. We also estimated separate models, stratified by nativity to identify predictors of contraceptive attitude among US-born Black women and foreign-born Black women, respectively.

Results
Three in four participants were US-born (76.6%). The average cumulative CAS score was 118.4 ±20.4 out of 160 indicating favorable contraceptive attitudes. In pooled analysis, foreign-born Black women had significantly lower contraceptive attitude scores compared to US-born women (adjusted regression coefficient (β)= −6.48, p=0.036). In nativity-stratified analysis, income, education, and perceived control over pregnancy timing were significant predictors of contraceptive attitudes for both US-born and foreign-born women. Other significant predictors of contraceptive attitude among US-born women were older maternal age, multi-parity, and perceived pregnancy risk; whereas, for foreign-born women, other significant predictors included marital status (married/cohabiting), language spoken predominantly at home (French), and perceived ability to have a baby and still achieve life goals (agree, neither agree nor disagree).

Conclusion
In addressing the contraceptive needs of Black women, it is important to recognize the differences in attitudes towards contraception by nativity and provide culturally sensitive information and education.

Citation

Olorunsaiye, C. Z., Brunner Huber, L. R., Degge, H. M., Yada, F. N., & Yusuf, K. K. (2024). Assessing the Contraceptive Attitudes of US-Born and Foreign-Born Black Women Living in the USA: a Descriptive Cross-Sectional Study. Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities, 11(2), 874-884. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40615-023-01569-7

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 13, 2023
Online Publication Date Mar 23, 2023
Publication Date 2024-04
Deposit Date May 31, 2024
Print ISSN 2197-3792
Electronic ISSN 2196-8837
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Issue 2
Pages 874-884
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s40615-023-01569-7
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/35159912
Publisher URL https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40615-023-01569-7