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Published in: Reproductive Health 1/2021

Open Access 01-12-2021 | Contraception | Research

Optimizing the design of a contraceptive microarray patch: a discrete choice experiment on women’s preferences in India and Nigeria

Authors: Rebecca L. Callahan, Aurélie Brunie, Victoria Lebrun, Mario Chen, Christine L. Godwin, Kanchan Lakhwani, Funmilola M. OlaOlorun

Published in: Reproductive Health | Issue 1/2021

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Abstract

Background

Efforts are underway to develop an easy-to-use contraceptive microarray patch (MAP) that could expand the range of self-administrable methods. This paper presents results from a discrete choice experiment (DCE) designed to support optimal product design.

Methods

We conducted a DCE survey of users and non-users of contraception in New Delhi, India (496 women) and Ibadan, Nigeria (two versions with 530 and 416 women, respectively) to assess stated preferences for up to six potential product attributes: effect on menstruation, duration of effectiveness, application pain, location, rash after application, and patch size. We estimated Hierarchical Bayes coefficients (utilities) for each attribute level and ran simulations comparing women’s preferences for hypothetical MAPs with varying attribute combinations.

Results

The most important attributes of the MAP were potential for menstrual side effects (55% of preferences in India and 42% in Nigeria) and duration (13% of preferences in India and 24% in Nigeria). Women preferred a regular period over an irregular or no period, and a six-month duration to three or one month. Simulations show that the most ideal design would be a small patch, providing 6 months of protection, that would involve no pain on administration, result in a one-day rash, and be applied to the foot.

Conclusions

To the extent possible, MAP developers should consider method designs and formulations that limit menstrual side effects and provide more than one month of protection.
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Metadata
Title
Optimizing the design of a contraceptive microarray patch: a discrete choice experiment on women’s preferences in India and Nigeria
Authors
Rebecca L. Callahan
Aurélie Brunie
Victoria Lebrun
Mario Chen
Christine L. Godwin
Kanchan Lakhwani
Funmilola M. OlaOlorun
Publication date
01-12-2021
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Reproductive Health / Issue 1/2021
Electronic ISSN: 1742-4755
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-021-01113-y

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