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To the Editor: Over a third of women seeking a termination of pregnancy (TOP) in Melbourne are aged 30 years or over.1 Between 1996 and 2006, there was a 29% increase in the number of women aged 30–50 years having a TOP.2 Possible reasons for this trend are not immediately apparent.
We audited the files of 50 consecutive women aged 35 years and over attending a private termination service in metropolitan Melbourne in February 2007 to determine reasons for deciding on a TOP and the women’s prior and intended contraceptive use.
Of the 50 women, 38 were working in paid employment, 28 had private health insurance, 39 had at least one child, 22 had had at least one previous TOP, and 43 were in an ongoing relationship. Sixteen separate reasons for TOP were elicited (Box), with nearly three-quarters of the women citing more than three reasons for terminating their pregnancy. Over a third of the women cited financial pressures, a focus on career or studies, having dependent children, or emotional unpreparedness for children as reasons for having a TOP.
Contraceptive methods used by the 29 women who indicated their prior contraceptive practice were as follows: none (9), condoms (8), natural family planning (NFP) (4), the combined oral contraceptive pill (COCP) (4), withdrawal (3), and the mini pill (1). After the TOP, contraceptive methods chosen were the COCP (11), vasectomy (10), an intrauterine device (10), condoms (8), the mini pill (5), an etonogestrel implant (4) and NFP (1).
Although ours was a small retrospective audit, the contraceptive findings and reasons given for TOP in our study were similar to those of other studies.1-4 However, some of the reasons given for TOP in this age group have not previously been described — for example, having ageing parents to care for, recent migration to Australia, and ambivalence towards parenting. Furthermore, although recent Australian studies have reported a high level of contraceptive use,2,5 women in our study often relied on less effective forms of contraception or no contraception at all.
Further qualitative research is needed in women of this age group to explore their understanding of fertility and pregnancy risk, barriers to effective contraceptive use, and additional supports and interventions that could prevent unplanned pregnancy in these women.
Acknowledgements: We thank Mark Jones and the staff at the Women’s Clinic on Richmond Hill, Melbourne, for their assistance with data collection. We gratefully acknowledge the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners Research Foundation for its support of our project. The project was funded by the Primary Health Care Research, Evaluation and Development program and the PWH Grieve Memorial Award.
Competing interests: Wendy Lee is a GP employed at the Women’s Clinic on Richmond Hill, where she works once a week. Our research is based on data from this clinic recorded by nine pregnancy counsellors, including her own.
Department of General Practice, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC.
wendy.leeATmed.monash.edu.au
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©The Medical Journal of Australia 2009 www.mja.com.au PRINT ISSN: 0025-729X ONLINE ISSN: 1326-5377