Reproductive Coercion: Connecting The Dots Between Partner Violence and Unintended Pregnancy*

Contraception Editorial June 2010 By: Elizabeth Miller, Beth Jordan, Rebecca Levenson, Jay G. Silverman Reproductive health professionals are in a critical position to reach women victimized by abusive relationships. In the general population, physical and …

Contraception Editorial June 2010

By: Elizabeth Miller, Beth Jordan, Rebecca Levenson, Jay G. Silverman

Reproductive health professionals are in a critical position to reach women victimized by abusive relationships. In the general population, physical and sexual violence victimization by an intimate partner affects an estimated one in four women across the life span, with one in five adolescent girls reporting such abuse.1, 2, 3 The prevalence of intimate partner violence reported among women utilizing sexual health services and seeking care in gynecologic and adolescent clinics is generally double these population-based estimates.4, 5, 6, 7 This is not surprising, as such victimization is consistently associated with increased pregnancy and sexually transmitted infection (STI), with abused women demonstrating disproportionately higher rates of seeking care at family planning and other health services related to sexual health, such as HIV and STI testing.8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16

Moreover, mounting evidence that unintended pregnancy occurs more commonly in abusive relationships highlights that victimized women face compromised decision making regarding contraceptive use and family planning, including condom use.17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 Forced sex, fear of violence if she refuses sex and difficulties negotiating contraception and condom use in the context of an abusive relationship all contribute to increased risk for unintended pregnancy and STIs. Thus, in settings where women seek care for sexual and reproductive health services, providers are well situated to build a bridge to further services for a significant number of women affected by partner violence. We suggest that providers can actually do more than simply offering a woman victim advocacy hotline numbers, based on new research findings.

In the April issue of Contraception, we highlighted a phenomenon we labeled “reproductive coercion”: explicit male behaviors to promote pregnancy (unwanted by the woman). Reproductive coercion can include “birth control sabotage” (interference with contraception) and/or “pregnancy coercion,” such as telling a woman not to use contraception and threatening to leave her if she doesn’t get pregnant.23, 24, 25, 26 While reproductive coercion was associated with unintended pregnancy in our study, we found that the risk for unintended pregnancy doubled among those women reporting both partner violence and reproductive coercion. This is certainly not surprising, as women in abusive relationships are more likely to fear the consequences of resistance to such coercive behaviors.

Reproductive coercion provides a new lens on contraceptive decision making and counseling women regarding pregnancy prevention options. This evidence linking partner violence, male influences on contraceptive decision making and unintended pregnancies underscores the need to strengthen connections between family planning practices and policies with efforts to reduce intimate partner violence.27 Reproductive health care providers should receive specific tools to assess for reproductive coercion and strategies to help affected clients. These tools and strategies include safety cards and posters that educate clients about reproductive coercion and methods of contraception that partners cannot interfere with (i.e., intrauterine devices, injectable contraceptives), policies that ensure clients have access to emergency contraception as well as longer acting and hidden forms of contraception, and training for providers on how to offer referrals to domestic violence hotlines and shelter resources. Planned Parenthood Federation of America has been working in tandem with the Family Violence Prevention Fund to implement these tools and strategies. This effort began with Planned Parenthood Shasta/Diablo (partner in this recent study) and has continued with affiliates in Los Angeles and Santa Barbara.

Screening and counseling related to reproductive coercion have benefits even for patients who may not currently identify themselves as being in a coercive relationship. Conversations on this topic may encourage women to recognize how an unhealthy relationship might be constraining her reproductive autonomy and affecting her health, while simultaneously providing an opportunity to introduce strategies to protect her sexual and reproductive health.

For adolescents in particular, assessment of a male partner’s reproductive coercion may help to explain a young woman’s inconsistent contraceptive use. Education and harm reduction strategies may be especially helpful for this population, as teens may misinterpret a partner’s controlling behaviors as evidence of his love, may not recognize such behaviors as abusive or coercive and may be particularly susceptible to such tactics based on conflicting peer pressures as well as her own ambivalence regarding pregnancy. Prior to assuming that a non-adherent teen needs additional education or motivation, assessment for partner violence and reproductive coercion may help to identify those young women struggling in an unhealthy relationship.

This work also has important implications for pregnancy prevention programs. Comprehensive sexuality education curricula that integrate discussions of partner violence, reproductive coercion and the contrast with healthy relationships are desperately needed. This information might increase girls’ and women’s self-efficacy in negotiating contraceptive and condom use while providing skills and knowledge on how to seek help for an unhealthy relationship. Of course, prevention programs that directly engage men and boys in reducing unintended pregnancy and promoting healthy, respectful, gender-equitable relationships are also needed.

Many questions emerge from this initial study. Pregnancy-controlling behaviors are certainly not exclusive to abusive relationships, but women experiencing partner violence appear to be at higher risk for experiencing reproductive coercion, and the experience of partner violence amplifies the impact of such coercion on women’s risk for unintended pregnancy.6, 23, 24 How reproductive coercion operates in the absence of violence requires further study. In addition, does partner violence manifest before attempts to control a woman’s pregnancy and the outcomes of that pregnancy? Or do coercive behaviors that include attempts to control her body and reproductive outcomes foreshadow physical and sexual violence in the relationship? And related to this, why might men engage in such controlling behaviors? How do they recognize and understand reproductive coercion? And finally, what might we do to reduce the prevalence of this range of behaviors among young men?

In conclusion, the addition of this concept of reproductive coercion may help providers in reframing inconsistent contraceptive use, moving us away from regarding this simply as a woman’s problem with noncompliance. We in the reproductive health field must strive to create sensitive, stigma-free spaces for women struggling in unhealthy relationships and contribute concretely towards promoting their safety and reducing their risk for unintended pregnancy.

Elizabeth Miller
Department of Pediatrics
UC Davis School of Medicine
Sacramento, CA

Beth Jordan
Association of Reproductive Health Professionals (ARHP)
Washington, DC

Rebecca Levenson
Family Violence Prevention Fund
San Francisco, CA

Jay G. Silverman
Department of Society, Human Development, and Health
Harvard School of Public Health
Boston, MA

References

  1. Tjaden P, Thoennes N. Prevalence, incidence and consequences of violence against women: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey. Washington, DC: Department of Justice, National Institute of Justice; 1998;.

  2. Silverman JG, Raj A, Mucci L, Hathaway J. Dating violence against adolescent girls and associated substance use, unhealthy weight control, sexual risk behavior, pregnancy, and suicidality. JAMA. 2001;286:572–579.
  3. Black B, Tolman R, Callahan M, Saunders D, Weisz A. When will adolescents tell someone about dating violence victimization?. Violence Against Women. 2008;14:741–758.
  4. Miller E, Decker MR, Raj A, Reed E, Marable D, Silverman JG. Intimate partner violence and health care-seeking patterns among female users of urban adolescent clinics. Matern Child Health J. 2009;2009 Sep 17 [Epub ahead of print].
  5. Rickert V, Wiemann C, Harrykissoon S, Berenson A, Kolb E. The relationship among demographics, reproductive characteristics, and intimate partner violence. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2002;187:1002–1007.

  6. Gee R, Mitra N, Wan F, Chavkin D, Long J. Power over parity: intimate partner violence and issues of fertility control. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2009;201(7):148.e1–148.e7.
  7. Keeling J, Birch L. The prevalence rates of domestic abuse in women attending a family planning clinic. J Fam Plann Reprod Health Care. 2004;30:113–114.
  8. Coker A, Derrick C, Lumpkin J, Aldrich T, Oldendick R. Help-seeking for intimate partner violence and forced sex in South Carolina. Am J Prev Med. 2000;19:316–320.

  9. Davila Y, Brackley M. Mexican and Mexican American women in a battered women’s shelter: barriers to condom negotiation for HIV/AIDS prevention. Issues Ment Health Nurs. 1999;20:333–355.
  10. Decker MR, Silverman JG, Raj A. Dating violence and sexually transmitted disease/HIV testing and diagnosis among adolescent females. Pediatrics. 2005;116:e272–e276.
  11. Eisenstat S, Bancroft L. Domestic violence. N Engl J Med. 1999;341:886–892.

  12. El-Bassel N, Gilbert L, Krishnan S, et al. Partner violence and sexual HIV-risk behaviors among women in an inner-city emergency department. Violence Vict. 1998;13:377–393.
  13. Gazmararian J, Petersen R, Spitz A, Goodwin M, Saltzman L, Marks J. Violence and reproductive health: current knowledge and future research directions. Matern Child Health J. 2000;4:79–84.

  14. Hathaway J, Mucci L, Silverman J, et al. Health status and health care use of Massachusetts women reporting partner abuse.. Am J Prev Med. 2000;19:302–307.
  15. Raj A, Silverman JG, Amaro H. The relationship between sexual abuse and sexual risk among high school students: findings from the 1997 Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Survey. Matern Child Health J. 2000;4:125–134.
  16. Shrier L, Pierce J, Emans S, Durant R. Gender differences in risk behaviors associated with forced or pressured sex. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 1998;152:57–63.
  17. Cripe SM, Sanchez SE, Perales MT, Gaarcia P, Williams MA. Association of intimate partner physical and sexual violence with unintended pregnancy among pregnant women in Peru. Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2008;100:104–108.
  18. Gao W, Paterson J, Carter S, Iusitini L. Intimate partner violence and unplanned pregnancy in the Pacific Islands Families Study. Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2007;100:109–115.

  19. Pallitto C, O’campo P. The relationship between intimate partner violence and unintended pregnancy: analysis of a national sample from Colombia. Int Fam Plan Perspect. 2004;30:165–173.
  20. Silverman JG, Gupta J, Decker MR, Kapur N, Raj A. Intimate partner violence and unwanted pregnancy, miscarriage, induced abortion, and stillbirth among a national sample of Bangladeshi women. Int J Obstet Gynaecol. 2007;114:1246–1252.
  21. Stephenson R, Koenig MA, Acharya R, Roy T. Domestic violence, contraceptive use, and unwanted pregnancy in Rural India. Stud Fam Plan. 2008;39:177–186.
  22. Wingood GM, Diclemente R. The effects of an abusive primary partner on the condom use and sexual negotiation practices of African-American women. Am J Public Health. 1997;87:1016–1018.

  23. Center for Impact Research. Domestic violence and birth control sabotage: a report from the Teen Parent Project: Teen Parent Project; 2000. Available at: http://www.impactresearch.org/documents/dvandbirthcontrol.pdf
  24. Miller E, Decker MR, Mccauley H, et al. Pregnancy coercion, intimate partner violence and unintended pregnancy. Contraception. 2010;81:316–322.
  25. Miller E, Decker MR, Reed E, Raj A, Hathaway J, Silverman J. Male pregnancy promoting behaviors and adolescent partner violence: findings from a qualitative study with adolescent females. Ambul Pediatr. 2007;7:360–366.
  26. Moore L, Frohwirth L, Miller E. Male reproductive control of women who have experienced intimate partner violence in the United States. Soc Sci Med [in press].
  27. Watts C, Mayhew S. Reproductive health services and intimate partner violence: shaping a pragmatic response in Sub-Saharan Africa. Int Fam Plan Perspec. 2004;30:207–213.

* This commentary was produced with funding support from National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (R21 HD057814-02 to Miller and Silverman), UC Davis Health System Research Award to Miller and Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women’s Health award to Miller (BIRCWH, K12 HD051958; National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Office of Research on Women’s Health, Office of Dietary Supplements, National Institute of Aging).

Drug Integrity Associate Audrey Amos is a pharmacist with experience in health communication and has a passion for making health information accessible. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Butler University. As a Drug Integrity Associate, she audits drug content, addresses drug-related queries

Leave a Comment