The Impact of a Digital Contraceptive Decision Aid on User Outcomes: Results of an Experimental, Clinical Trial
- PMID: 38828482
- DOI: 10.1093/abm/kaae024
The Impact of a Digital Contraceptive Decision Aid on User Outcomes: Results of an Experimental, Clinical Trial
Abstract
Background: Nearly 40% of unplanned pregnancies in the USA are the result of inconsistent or incorrect contraceptive use. Finding ways to increase women's comfort and satisfaction with contraceptive use is therefore critical to public health. One promising pathway for improving patient outcomes is through the use of digital decision aids that assist women and their physicians in choosing a contraceptive option that women are comfortable with. Testing the ability of these aids to improve patient outcomes is therefore a necessary first step toward incorporating this technology into traditional physician appointments.
Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness of a novel contraceptive decision aid at minimizing decisional conflict and increasing comfort with contraception among adult women.
Methods: In total, 310 adult women were assigned to use either the Tuune contraceptive decision aid or a control aid modeled after a leading online contraceptive prescriber's patient intake form. Participants then completed self-report measures of decisional conflict, contraceptive expectations, satisfaction, and contraceptive use intentions. Individual between-subjects analysis of variance (ANOVA) models were used to examine these outcomes.
Results: Women using the Tuune decision aid (vs. those using the control aid) reported lower decisional conflict, more positive contraceptive expectations, greater satisfaction with the decision aid and recommendation, and more positive contraceptive use intentions.
Conclusions: Use of Tuune improved each of the predicted patient outcomes relative to a control decision aid. Online decision aids, particularly when used alongside physician consultations, may be an effective tool for increasing comfort with contraceptive use.
Clinical trials registration #: NCT05177783, ClinicalTrials.gov, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05177783.
Keywords: Birth control; Contraception; Decision aid; Decisional conflict; Patient satisfaction.
Plain language summary
Digital decision aids that help women and their physicians choose contraceptive options that women are most comfortable with present one promising way to improve contraceptive use outcomes, such as avoiding unplanned pregnancies. However, current decision aids have been found to struggle in helping improve women’s satisfaction with and confidence in their contraceptive choices. The aim of this study was to test the effectiveness of a new digital decision aid, named Tuune, at helping improve women’s confidence and comfort with contraception. Three hundred and ten adult women were randomly assigned to use and then receive a contraceptive recommendation from either the Tuune decision aid or a control aid designed after leading traditional health intake forms. Women’s confidence and satisfaction with the aids, as well as their contraceptive recommendation, were then compared between groups. We found good evidence to suggest that women using the Tuune contraceptive decision aid were more satisfied and positive about their contraceptive choices and reported greater intentions to use contraception with increased confidence compared to women who used the control decision aid. New online decision aids, like Tuune, may be an effective tool for increasing women’s comfort and experiences using contraception.
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