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What 鈥業 just wasn鈥檛 thinking鈥 really says about taking contraceptive risks

CU researchers try to understand why women engage in risky behavior with regards to contraception.

One CU researcher decodes a frequent explanation for unprotected sex

When asked why they didn鈥檛 use contraception or took other contraceptive risks, women in a 精品SM在线影片 study overwhelmingly replied that they just weren鈥檛 thinking. What they meant by that varied widely.

CU-Boulder Ph.D. candidate Laurie James-Hawkins conducted an original study on the CU-Boulder campus focusing on the underlying reasons for risky contraceptive behavior among college women.

Published in March in the听Journal of Midwifery and Women鈥檚 Health,听her research was based on interviews with women who initially self-reported having taken contraceptive risks. This research has implications for how clinicians can help reduce risky behavior and consequent unintended pregnancies.

Fifty-one percent of all pregnancies in the United States are unintended, and James-Hawkins says college-aged women (18 to 25) account for a large percentage of these accidental pregnancies. Not all the women she interviewed had become pregnant, but all had taken contraceptive risks at one time or another.

Before coming to 精品SM在线影片, James-Hawkins had looked at third-party surveys that asked women why they took contraceptive risks. She was frustrated by the frequent reply, 鈥淚 just wasn鈥檛 thinking.鈥 She wanted more meaningful answers.

In one-on-one interviews, James-Hawkins asked her subjects why they had taken contraceptive risks. Of the 45 women interviewed, 91 percent spontaneously said, 鈥淚 just wasn鈥檛 thinking.鈥

She asked each woman what she meant by this.

鈥淪ome women were vividly uncomfortable when I pushed them on the question,鈥 James-Hawkins says. 鈥淚 think they saw their [initial] answer as not being politically correct. In our culture, in the middle class, it鈥檚 the social norm to use contraceptives.鈥

Because sexual risk-taking is considered inappropriate and irresponsible, women were compelled to come up with answers to make their behavior seem less deliberate.

"Some women were vividly uncomfortable when I pushed them on the question.听I think they saw their [initial] answer as not being politically correct. In our culture, in the middle class, it鈥檚 the social norm to use contraceptives.鈥

鈥淭o some extent, the 鈥業 just wasn鈥檛 thinking鈥 answer was impression-management, both for me and themselves,鈥 James-Hawkins says.

She found that women have multiple meanings when they say they 鈥渨eren鈥檛 thinking,鈥 and they generally fall under four major themes.

鈥淎lmost all of the explanations were based on erroneous risk calculations that led the women to believe they were not likely to experience a pregnancy,鈥 James-Hawkins says. 鈥淥nly a small minority of women interviewed meant they had literally not thought about the possibility of pregnancy.鈥

One group of women assessed their risk and then consciously chose to ignore it.

A second group of women incorrectly assessed their cumulative risk of pregnancy.

鈥淚t is true that one single act of unprotected sex is unlikely to lead to pregnancy,鈥 James-Hawkins says. 鈥淭he problem is that after 鈥榞etting away with it鈥 once, you feel invincible and safer doing it more.鈥

Some women decide they must be infertile or have no need for contraception, she says.

But with multiple risks, or continuing incidence of unprotected sex, cumulative risk of pregnancy increases.

Other women may have been on the birth control pill for two years, but missed a few days, James-Hawkins says. 鈥淭hey assume they are safe, but when you stop taking birth control, your protection stops鈥onsistency is really important.鈥

For a third group of women, alcohol played a major role in their decisions to have unprotected sex.

鈥淪ome women said, 鈥極h, I just wasn鈥檛 thinking because I was really drunk.鈥 Or they were realizing in the middle of sex that is was unprotected. Or they were having sex and not remembering it.鈥

James-Hawkins asked the women who attributed their risky behavior to alcohol whether they knew beforehand that they were going to have sex. She found that many 鈥渦nderestimate how much they drink and overestimate the agency they have while drunk.鈥

"Even if earlier in the interview they had decoded the answer for themselves, they would give themselves the benefit of the doubt, but then they attributed that same behavior to a character defect in others.鈥

A fourth group of women accepted the risk of pregnancy and chose to deal with it later. In some cases, women didn鈥檛 want to risk their relationship with their partner by delaying sex. This group also had knowledge of Plan B birth control.

At the end of each interview, James-Hawkins asked each woman what she thought other women meant when they attributed unprotected sex to 鈥渏ust not thinking.鈥

While most subjects explained their individual decisions as a one-time choice, their explanations of other women鈥檚 behavior included those women being stupid or dumb, being in love or not thinking about the future, and social norms discouraging women from carrying condoms.

鈥淓ven if earlier in the interview they had decoded the answer for themselves, they would give themselves the benefit of the doubt, but then they attributed that same behavior to a character defect in others,鈥 James-Hawkins says.

She is interested in researching this double-standard in the future, but for now she wants to focus on what her research means.

鈥溾楯ust not thinking鈥 is a blanket term that represents [women鈥檚] attempts to explain behavior with which they themselves are not comfortable and for which they often do not feel they have an adequate explanation,鈥 James-Hawkins says.

She hopes her research will impact the way clinicians approach birth control and address reasons for contraceptive risk-taking with women.

鈥淵ou can give someone the pill but you鈥檙e not there to make sure they take it every day,鈥 James-Hawkins says. 鈥淚f [a physician] delves into a woman鈥檚 needs for birth control and gets answers like the women gave in my survey, then the pill is probably not a good idea.鈥

Instead, she suggests that long-acting and reversible birth control like an IUD might fit some women鈥檚 needs better.

Lara Herrington Watson is a CU alumna (鈥07) and freelance writer who splits her time between Denver and Phoenix.