On this page: About the National Data | Methodology | History
About the National Data
Data
Data Source: National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG), CDC/NCHS
Baseline: 56.3 percent of females aged 15 to 19 years at risk of unintended pregnancy used most effective or moderately effective methods of contraception in 2015-17
Target: 70.1 percent
Methodology
Questions used to obtain the national baseline data
CONSTAT1-CONSTAT4
recodes are used to measure current contraceptive status.
- Female sterilization
- Male sterilization
- Norplant or Implanon implant
- Depo-Provera (injectable)
- Pill
- Contraceptive Patch
- Contraceptive Ring
- Emergency contraception
- IUD
- Diaphragm (with or w/out jelly or cream)
- (Male) Condom
- Foam
- Suppository or insert
- Jelly or cream (not with diaphragm)
- Periodic abstinence: NFP, cervical mucus test or temperature rhythm
- Periodic abstinence: calendar rhythm
- Withdrawal
- Other method
- Pregnant
- Seeking Pregnancy
- Postpartum
- Sterile—nonsurgical—female
- Sterile—nonsurgical—male
- Sterile—surgical—female (noncontraceptive)
- Sterile—surgical—male (noncontraceptive)
- Other nonuser—never had intercourse since first period
- Other nonuser—has had intercourse, but not in the 3 months prior to interview
- Other nonuser—had intercourse in the 3 months prior to interview
HADSEX
: Whether respondent has ever had sexual intercourse with a male (Recode).
- Yes
- No
AGER
: Respondent age at interview (Recode): 15-19
Methodology notes
The most effective methods of contraception are: male or female sterilization, implants, and intrauterine devices or systems (IUD/IUS). Moderately effective methods of contraception are: injectables, oral pills, patch, ring, or diaphragm.
At risk of unintended pregnancy is defined as women who have ever had sex (with a man), are not sterile (for surgical noncontraceptive or nonsurgical reasons), or are neither pregnant, seeking pregnancy, nor postpartum.