Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Public Perceptions about Unplanned Pregnancy

Family planning perspectives(1997)

Cited 10|Views11
No score
Abstract
A nationally representative telephone survey in 1994 of 2,002 adults indicates that 60% believe that unplanned pregnancy is a very big problem in the United States, and virtually all (90%) say it is at least a somewhat big problem. Two-thirds mistakenly believe that a larger percentage of women have unplanned pregnancies now than 10 years ago. A decline in moral standards is cited by 89% of respondents as contributing very much or somewhat to the problem. Lack of education is mentioned as a significant factor by 87%, and 88% see any of three barriers to contraceptive use--knowledge about use, access or cost--as being important factors. Never-married women with children, women in general, low-income respondents, Hispanics and those aged 65 or older are the most likely to believe that barriers to contraceptive access contribute very much to unplanned pregnancy; they are especially likely to cite cost or an inability to obtain contraceptives.
More
Translated text
Key words
Americas,Behavior,Contraception,Contraceptive Availability,Contraceptive Methods--cost,Contraceptive Usage,Demographic Factors,Developed Countries,Education,Ethics,Family Planning,Family Planning Education,Fertility,North America,Northern America,Perception,Population,Population Dynamics,Pregnancy, Unplanned,Psychological Factors,Reproductive Behavior,Research Methodology,Research Report,Sampling Studies,Studies,Surveys,United States
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined