News

Women’s use of STD-related services up 27% since 2002


 

The use of most forms of family planning and related medical services has dropped slightly since 2002 in women aged 15-44 years, but STD counseling, testing, and treatment increased by 27%, the National Center for Health Statistics reported.

The percentage of women 15-44 years old who received any family planning or related medical service was up slightly during 2006-2010 (70%), compared with 1995 (69%), but that was after it had reached almost 73% in 2002, according to data from the National Survey of Family Growth.

Between 2002 and 2006-2010, use also declined for birth control method/prescription, sterilization counseling, pregnancy tests, and Pap tests.

The percentage of women receiving STD counseling, testing, and treatment was 16.0% in 2006-2010, an increase of 27% from 2002’s figure of 12.6% and more than double the 7.6% recorded in 1995. For the 2002 survey, however, the word "counseling" was added to the relevant question, "thereby broadening the scope of the question," the report noted.

rfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Oldest adults most likely to use prescription sleep aids
MDedge Family Medicine
Disclosing medical errors
MDedge Family Medicine
Pain and suffering
MDedge Family Medicine
CMS reverses course, allows modifier for newborn care
MDedge Family Medicine
Five top hospital-acquired infections cost billions
MDedge Family Medicine
Family medicine the most recruited specialty
MDedge Family Medicine
Rate of avoidable heart disease deaths highest in blacks
MDedge Family Medicine
Pertussis vaccination rate highest in Mississippi for 2012-2013
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA announces classwide label changes to extended-release/long-acting opioids
MDedge Family Medicine
Fewer than 1% of doctors mention sunscreen to patients
MDedge Family Medicine