Patient-centered counseling to help women achieve their reproductive goals is an essential yet often absent component of primary care. Christine Dehlendorf, MD, MAS, professor of family community medicine at the Univerity of California San Francisco, says she began to think about the central role of patient-centered counseling in family planning when she started her fellowship in 2006, at about the same time several new methods of contraception were being launched.
She began to notice that health care professional enthusiasm for the novel methods as options for women desiring contraception was shifting toward less nuanced, more directive conversations in which the new methods were presented as the best options. Women who did not want to use them most likely "needed more counseling."
In a recent conversation with Patient Care®, Dehlendorf explains her reaction to those early signs of waning patient autonomy .
Bringing PPD Screening to the Forefront of Maternal Health: A Q&A with Joy Baker, MD
June 3rd 2025ACOG 2025: Joy Baker, MD, discusses the urgent need to prioritize postpartum depression screening, normalize mental health in prenatal care, and strengthen continuity between OB-GYN and primary care.