When it comes to birth control, what you want matters. A new study of 2,599 women living with HIV in Kenya found that women who preferred long-acting methods were 63% more likely to actually use one. The same was true for women who wanted to avoid daily dosing or be able to stop on their own.
The study asked women about their ideal contraceptive attributes, then checked what they were using. Women who preferred concealable methods were also more likely to use them, though the link was weaker.
But here's the catch: no single method can satisfy all preferences at once. A woman might want long-acting protection, no daily pills, and the ability to stop anytime. Those desires conflict. The study suggests that counseling should help women prioritize what matters most to them.
This is an observational analysis within a larger trial, so it can't prove cause and effect. It also didn't look at pregnancy rates or HIV transmission. Still, it offers a clear message: listen to what women want, and they're more likely to use what works.