Abstract
Postcoital contraception (PCC) is a safe and effective method of avoiding unwanted pregnancy after an occurrence of unprotected sex. It nevertheless represents an absence or failure of preventive strategies. Women engaging in unprotected sex may have been exposed to risks of sexually transmissible diseases (STDs) including HIV/AIDS. Family planning service providers have expressed concern at the number of women using this emergency measure as a form of contraception, sometimes repeatedly, but little is known about the sort of women they are and the context in which unprotected sex has occurred. This paper reports the sociodemographic characteristics of women requiring PCC in the two clinical sites of Family Planning Victoria. A self-administered questionnaire was completed by 206 women who required PCC during a 3-month period. The women were aged 14-43 years with an average age of 23 years. Over half the women had used PCC previously and more than a quarter of these women had used it more than twice before. Most of the women had had sex with a regular boyfriend, husband or partner at their own or their partner's home. The main reasons given for needing PCC were nonuse of condoms, condom breakage and missing an oral contraceptive pill.