D_Title X FPAR 2019 National Summary

D_title-x-fpar-2019-national-summary.pdf

Family Planning Annual Report 2.0

D_Title X FPAR 2019 National Summary

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September 2020
C E L E B RAT I N G T I T L E X

1970–2020

Title X
Family Planning Annual Report
2019 National Summary

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

September 2020

Family Planning Annual Report:
2019 National Summary

Prepared for
Office of Population Affairs
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
1101 Wootton Parkway, Suite 200
Rockville, MD 20852
Prepared by
RTI International
3040 East Cornwallis Road
P.O. Box 12194
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709

SUGGESTED CITATION
Fowler, C. I., Gable, J., Lasater, B., & Asman, K. (2020, September). Family Planning
Annual Report: 2019 National Summary. Washington, DC: Office of Population Affairs,
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health, Department of Health and Human Services.

ADDITIONAL COPIES
This report can be viewed, downloaded, and printed from the Office of Population Affairs
Website at https://opa.hhs.gov/evaluation-research/title-x-services-research/family-planningannual-report.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This report was prepared by RTI International under OPA contract number
HHSP233201500039I/75P00119F37024. RTI staff who prepared the report include Christina
Fowler (Project Director and Health Scientist), Julia Gable (Statistician), Beth Lasater
(Information Systems Analyst), and Kat Asman (Statistician). The conclusions expressed in
this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of HHS or OPA.
Amy Morrow and Margaret Johnson (Editors); Judy Cannada and Roxanne Snaauw
(Document Preparation Specialists); and Kimberly Cone, Pam Tuck, and Teresa Bass (Web
Conversion Team) provided publications assistance. Al-Nisa Berry (FPAR Data System
Manager), Yuying Zhang (Programmer), and Vesselina Bakalov (Programmer) provided
support for web-based data collection.
For their help resolving data validation issues and reviewing the final report, the authors
thank the following U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of
Population Affairs (OPA) staff: Diane Foley (Deputy Assistant Secretary for Population
Affairs), Jamie Kim and Roshni Menon (FPAR Data Coordinators), Amy Margolis (Division
Director), Karen Silver (Senior Communications Specialist), and HHS/OPA Project Officers
(LCDR Cynda Hall, Alissa Harvey, Jo Anne Jensen, CDR Rebecca McTall, and Shenena
Merchant).
Finally, publication of this report would not have been possible without the contributions of
Title X services grantees and subrecipients that ensure access to a broad range of family
planning and related preventive health services for millions of low-income or uninsured
individuals and collect, compile, and submit FPAR data to OPA.

_________________________________
RTI International is a registered trademark and a trade name of Research Triangle Institute.

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

CONTENTS
Executive Summary ..................................................................................... ES-1
1

Introduction ........................................................................................................1
Title X National Family Planning Program ........................................................................... 1
Family Planning Annual Report............................................................................................. 2
Report Structure ..................................................................................................................... 3

2

FPAR Methodology ............................................................................................5
Data Collection ...................................................................................................................... 5
Data Validation ...................................................................................................................... 5

3

Title X Network Characteristics ........................................................................7
Title X Service Network Profile ............................................................................................ 7

4

Family Planning User Characteristics ..............................................................9
Demographic Profile .............................................................................................................. 9
Total Users (Exhibit 3) .................................................................................................... 9
Users by Sex (Exhibits 4 and 5) .................................................................................... 10
Users by Age (Exhibits 4 and 5) ................................................................................... 10
Users by Race (Exhibits 6 through 14) ......................................................................... 14
Users by Ethnicity (Exhibits 6 through 14) ................................................................... 14
Social and Economic Profile ................................................................................................ 23
Users by Income Level (Exhibit 15) ............................................................................. 23
Users by Insurance Coverage Status (Exhibit 16) ......................................................... 23
Users by Limited English Proficiency Status (Exhibit 17) ........................................... 24

5

Contraceptive Use ...........................................................................................29
Female Contraceptive Use (Exhibits 18 through 21) ........................................................... 29
Trends in Female Primary Contraceptive Method Use ................................................. 30
Male Contraceptive use (Exhibits 22 through 25) ............................................................... 31

6

Related Preventive Health Services................................................................41
Cervical and Breast Cancer Screening ................................................................................. 41
Cervical Cancer Screening (Exhibit 26)........................................................................ 41
Breast Cancer Screening (Exhibit 26) ........................................................................... 41
Sexually Transmitted Disease Testing ................................................................................. 43

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

iii

Chlamydia Testing (Exhibits 27 and 28)....................................................................... 43
Gonorrhea Testing (Exhibit 29) .................................................................................... 46
Syphilis Testing (Exhibit 29) ........................................................................................ 46
HIV Testing (Exhibit 29) .............................................................................................. 46

7

Staffing and Service Utilization.......................................................................49
Staffing and Family Planning Encounters............................................................................ 49
Clinical Services Provider Staffing (Exhibit 30) ........................................................... 49
Family Planning Encounters (Exhibit 30) ..................................................................... 49

8

Project Revenue ...............................................................................................53
Revenue................................................................................................................................ 53
Title X Services Grant ................................................................................................... 53
Payment for Services: Client Fees ................................................................................ 53
Payment for Services: Third-Party Payers .................................................................... 53
Other Revenue............................................................................................................... 54
Revenue per User and Encounter .................................................................................. 54
Trends in Project Revenue 2009 vs. 2019 ..................................................................... 58

9

References .......................................................................................................59

Appendixes
A National Trend Exhibits .............................................................................................. A-1
B State Exhibits............................................................................................................... B-1
C Field and Methodological Notes ................................................................................. C-1

Exhibits
1. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services regions ............................................... 4
2. Number of and percentage change in grantees, subrecipients, and service sites,
by year and region: 2018–2019 (Source: FPAR Grantee Profile Cover Sheet) .............. 7
3. Number, distribution, and percentage change in number of all family planning
users, by year and region: 2018–2019 (Source: FPAR Table 1) ..................................... 9
4. Number of all family planning users, by sex, age, and region: 2019 (Source:
FPAR Table 1) .............................................................................................................. 12
5. Distribution of all family planning users, by sex, age, and region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 1) ................................................................................................ 13
6. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by race and ethnicity:
2019 (Source: FPAR Tables 2 and 3) ............................................................................ 15

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

7. Number and distribution of female family planning users, by race and
ethnicity: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 2) ....................................................................... 15
8. Number and distribution of male family planning users, by race and ethnicity:
2019 (Source: FPAR Table 3) ....................................................................................... 15
9. Number of all family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Tables 2 and 3) ..................................................................................... 16
10. Distribution of all family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Tables 2 and 3) ..................................................................................... 17
11. Number of female family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 2) ................................................................................................ 18
12. Distribution of female family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region:
2019 (Source: FPAR Table 2) ....................................................................................... 19
13. Number of male family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 3) ................................................................................................ 20
14. Distribution of male family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region:
2019 (Source: FPAR Table 3) ....................................................................................... 21
15. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by income level and
region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 4) ........................................................................... 25
16. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by principal health
insurance coverage status and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 5) .......................... 26
17. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by limited English
proficiency (LEP) status and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 6) ............................ 27
18. Number of female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method
and age: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7)......................................................................... 32
19. Distribution of female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method
and age: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7)......................................................................... 33
20. Number of female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method
and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7) .................................................................... 34
21. Distribution of female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method
and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7) .................................................................... 35
22. Number of male family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and
age: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 8) ............................................................................... 36
23. Distribution of male family planning users, by primary contraceptive method
and age: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 8)......................................................................... 37
24. Number of male family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and
region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 8) ........................................................................... 38
25. Distribution of male family planning users, by primary contraceptive method
and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 8) .................................................................... 39
26. Cervical and breast cancer screening activities, by screening test or exam and
region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Tables 9 and 10) ............................................................. 42

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

v

27. Number of family planning users tested for chlamydia, by sex, age, and region:
2019 (Source: FPAR Table 11) ..................................................................................... 43
28. Percentage of family planning users in each age group tested for chlamydia, by
sex, age, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 11) ................................................... 45
29. Number of gonorrhea, syphilis, and HIV tests performed, by test type and
region, and number of positive HIV tests, by region: 2019 (Source: FPAR
Table 12) ....................................................................................................................... 46
30. Number and distribution of FTE CSP staff, by type of CSP and region, and
number and distribution of FP encounters, by type of encounter and region:
2019 (Source: FPAR Table 13) ..................................................................................... 51
31. Amount and distribution of Title X project revenues, by revenue source: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 14) .............................................................................................. 55
32. Amount of Title X project revenues, by revenue source and region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 14) .............................................................................................. 56
33. Distribution of Title X project revenues, by revenue source and region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 14) .............................................................................................. 57
A–1a. Number of Title X-funded grantees, subrecipients, and service sites, by region
and year: 2009–2019 ................................................................................................... A-2
A–1b. Distribution of Title X-funded grantees, subrecipients, and service sites, by
region and year: 2009–2019 ........................................................................................ A-3
A–1c. Number of Title X-funded service sites and users per service site, by year:
2009–2019 ................................................................................................................... A-4
A–2a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by region and year:
2009–2019 ................................................................................................................... A-6
A–2b. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by region and year:
2009–2019 ................................................................................................................... A-7
A–3a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by age and year:
2009–2019 ................................................................................................................... A-8
A–3b. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by age and year:
2009–2019 ................................................................................................................... A-9
A–4a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by race and year:
2009–2019 ................................................................................................................. A-10
A–4b. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by race and year:
2009–2019 ................................................................................................................. A-11
A–5a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by Hispanic or Latino
ethnicity (all races) and year: 2009–2019 ................................................................. A-12
A–5b. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by Hispanic or Latino
ethnicity (all races) and year: 2009–2019 ................................................................. A-13
A–6a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by Hispanic or Latino
ethnicity, race, and year: 2009–2019......................................................................... A-14

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

A–6b. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by Hispanic or Latino
ethnicity, race, and year: 2009–2019......................................................................... A-15
A–7a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by income level and
year: 2009–2019 ........................................................................................................ A-16
A–7b. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by income level and
year: 2009–2019 ........................................................................................................ A-17
A–8a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by primary health
insurance status and year: 2009–2019 ....................................................................... A-18
A–8b. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by primary health
insurance status and year: 2009–2019 ....................................................................... A-19
A–9a. Number of all female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method
and year: 2009–2019 ................................................................................................. A-20
A–9b. Distribution of all female family planning users, by primary contraceptive
method and year: 2009–2019 .................................................................................... A-21
A–9c. Number and distribution of all female family planning users, by type of
primary contraceptive method and year: 2009–2019 ................................................ A-22
A–10a. Number and percentage of female users who received a Pap test, number of
Pap tests performed, and percentage of Pap tests performed with an ASC or
higher result, by year: 2009–2019 ............................................................................. A-23
A–10b. Number and percentage of female users who received a Pap test, by year:
2009–2019 ................................................................................................................. A-23
A–11a. Number and percentage of female users under 25 tested for chlamydia, by
year: 2009–2019 ........................................................................................................ A-24
A–11b. Number and percentage of female users under 25 tested for chlamydia, by
year: 2009–2019 ........................................................................................................ A-24
A–12a. Number of confidential HIV tests performed and number of tests per 10 users
(all, female, and male), by year: 2009–2019 ............................................................. A-25
A–12b. Number of confidential HIV tests performed and number of tests per 10 users
(all, female, and male), by year: 2009–2019 ............................................................. A-25
A–13a. Actual and adjusted (constant 2019$ and 2009$) total, Title X, and Medicaid
revenue, by year: 2009–2019 .................................................................................... A-26
A–13b. Total, Title X, and Medicaid adjusted (constant 2019$) revenue (in millions),
by year: 2009–2019 ................................................................................................... A-27
A–13c. Total actual (unadjusted) and adjusted (constant 2019$ and 2009$) revenue
(in millions), by year: 2009–2019 ............................................................................. A-28
A–13d. Title X actual (unadjusted) and adjusted (constant 2019$ and 2009$) revenue
(in millions), by year: 2009–2019 ............................................................................. A-29
A–13e. Medicaid actual (unadjusted) and adjusted (constant 2019$ and 2009$)
revenue (in millions), by year: 2009–2019................................................................ A-30
A–14a. Amount of Title X project revenue, by revenue source and year: 2009–2019 .......... A-32

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

vii

A–14b. Distribution of Title X project revenue, by revenue source and year: 2009–
2019 ........................................................................................................................... A-33
A–14c. Amount (unadjusted) and distribution of Title X project revenue, by revenue
source and year: 2009–2019 ...................................................................................... A-34
B–1. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by sex and state, and
distribution of all users, by state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 1) ................................ B-2
B–2. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by user income level and
state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 4)............................................................................ B-4
B–3a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by insurance status and
state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 5)............................................................................ B-6
B–3b. Number and distribution of all family planning users in the 50 states and
District of Columbia, by insurance status and state according to the status of
the states’ Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (ACA): 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 5) .............................................................................................. B-8
B–4. Number and distribution of female family planning users at risk of unintended
pregnancy, by level of effectiveness of the primary method used or adopted at
exit from the encounter and state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7) ............................. B-10
B–5. Number and percentage of female family planning users under 25 years who
were tested for chlamydia, by state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 11) ....................... B-12

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Executive Summary
The Title X National Family Planning Program, administered by the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS), Office of Population Affairs (OPA), is the only federal
program dedicated solely to supporting the delivery of family planning and related preventive
health care. The program is designed to provide “a broad range of acceptable and effective
family planning methods and services (including natural family planning methods, infertility
services, and services for adolescents)”1, p. 1 with priority given to persons from low-income
families. In addition to offering these methods and services on a voluntary and confidential
basis, Title X-funded service sites provide contraceptive education and counseling; breast and
cervical cancer screening; sexually transmitted disease (STD) and human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) testing, referral, and prevention education; and pregnancy diagnosis and
counseling.2,3 The program is implemented through competitively awarded grants to state and
local public health departments and family planning, community health, and other private
nonprofit agencies. In fiscal year 2019, the Title X program received approximately
$286.5 million in federal Title X funding.4
Annual submission of the Family Planning Annual Report (FPAR)5 is required of all Title X
service grantees.6 The 15-table FPAR provides grantee-level data on the demographic and
social characteristics of Title X clients, their use of family planning and related preventive
health services, staffing, and revenue. FPAR data have multiple uses, which include
monitoring performance and compliance with statutory requirements, fulfilling federal
accountability and performance reporting requirements, and guiding strategic and financial
planning. In addition, OPA uses FPAR data to respond to inquiries from policy makers and
Congress about the program and to estimate the impact of Title X on key reproductive health
outcomes.5
The purpose of the Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary is to present the
national-, regional-, and state-level findings for the 2019 reporting period (calendar year) and
trends for selected measures. Below we highlight key findings.

KEY 2019 FPAR FINDINGS
A diverse network of public and private nonprofit health and community service
agencies delivers Title X services. In 2019, Title X-funded services were implemented
through 100 grants * to 47 state and local health departments and 53 nonprofit family planning
and community health agencies. Title X funds supported a network of 3,825 service sites
operated by either grantees or 1,060 subrecipients in the 50 United States, the District of
Columbia, and eight U.S. territories and Freely Associated States. The total number of service

*

In this report, the terms “grantee” and “grant” are synonymous. If an agency receives multiple grants to
support Title X services in different geographic areas (e.g., different states), OPA will require the agency
to submit separate FPARs and the agency will appear more than once in the Title X grantee count. In
2019, 91 agencies submitted one FPAR, three agencies submitted two FPARs, and one agency submitted
three FPARs.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

ES-1

sites in 2019 (3,825 sites) was 3% lower than in 2018 (3,954 sites) and 15% lower than in
2009 (4,515 sites). Of the 100 grantees that were active during 2019, 28 discontinued
participating in the program during the year and reported FPAR data for a period of less than
12 months, resulting in decreases in the numbers of family planning users served, project
revenue, and other performance measures.
Changes in Title X program regulations affect the capacity and performance of the
Title X service network. On March 3, 2019, HHS issued a Final Rule7,8 that revised Title X
regulations governing several aspects of how Title X-funded projects deliver family planning
care. OPA updated Title X regulations to “clarify and ensure compliance with the statutory
intent of the program.”9 As a condition of their continued participation in Title X and
pursuant to court orders, grantees were required to comply by July 15, 2019 with all
requirements of the Final Rule, except for the physical separation requirements. In addition,
by August 19, 2019, grantees choosing to remain in the program were required to submit an
“Assurance and Action Plan” documenting the steps they would take to comply with the Final
Rule and a written statement with supporting evidence demonstrating that their Title X
project was in compliance. Compliance with the physical separation requirements was
required starting March 4, 2020. For more information about the Title X Final Rule, please
visit the OPA website: Compliance with Statutory Program Integrity Requirements.
As a result of the Final Rule, 18 agencies representing 19 grants and 231 subrecipients
discontinued participation in the Title X program; the number of Title X service sites was
reduced by 945 sites. In September 2019, OPA awarded $33.7 million in supplemental grants
to 50 remaining grantees to offset the impact of these withdrawals. These grants were
intended to support family planning services in areas that were underserved or left unserved
by agencies that withdrew from the program. OPA plans to award new grants in
September 2020.
Title X providers serve a socioeconomically disadvantaged population, most of whom
are female, low income, and young. In 2019, Title X-funded providers served over
3.1 million family planning users (i.e., clients) through almost 4.7 million family planning
encounters. About 9 of every 10 users (87%) were female, 61% were under 30 years of age,
and 64% had family incomes at or below the poverty level ($25,750 for a family of four in the
48 contiguous states and the District of Columbia).10
The total number of family planning users served in 2019 (3.1 million users) was 21% lower
than in 2018 (3.9 million users) and 40% lower than in 2009 (5.2 million users). From 2009
to 2011, the program served over 5 million
users annually. The number of users served
A family planning user is an individual who
has at least one family planning encounter at a
subsequently decreased to about 4 million per
Title X service site during the reporting period.
year between 2012 and 2014 and remained at
A family planning encounter is a
about this level from 2014 to 2018
documented, face-to-face interaction between
(see Exhibit A–2a). In comments
an individual and a family planning provider
accompanying their FPAR data, grantees
that includes the delivery of family planning
services (alone or in conjunction with related
attribute the annual changes in user counts to
preventive health services) to avoid
economic factors affecting service demand or
unintended pregnancies or achieve intended
pregnancies.
the capacity and financial sustainability of the
network (e.g., recession, level or reduced

ES-2

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

funding, health reform), increased use of long-acting contraceptive methods or changes in
cervical cancer screening guidelines that reduced the number of encounters, implementation
of the Title X Final Rule, and various other factors (e.g., natural disasters, staffing).
Title X providers serve a population with low rates of health insurance. In 2019, 58% of
family planning users had either public (38%) or private (20%) health insurance, and 41%
were uninsured. Since 2015, the percentage of clients with health insurance has exceeded the
percentage without insurance. Although this increase in health insurance coverage signals
better health care access for Title X clients, the percentage of users who were uninsured
(41%) in 2019 was almost triple the national uninsured rate for adults (14%).11
Title X providers serve a racially and ethnically diverse population. Of the 3.1 million
family planning users served in 2019, 32% self-identified with at least one of the nonwhite
Office of Management and Budget race categories (black or African American, Asian, Native
Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaska Native, or more than one race),12
33% self-identified as Hispanic or Latino, and 15% were limited English proficient.
Title X providers offer clients a broad range of acceptable and effective family planning
methods and services. In 2019, 77% of the 2.7 million females served were using or adopted
a contraceptive method at their last encounter. The types of contraceptive methods used or
adopted included short-term hormonal methods like pills, injectables, the vaginal ring, or
patch (40%); long-acting reversible methods like intrauterine devices or implants (16%);
barrier methods like condoms, spermicide, or contraceptive sponge (15%); permanent
methods like female sterilization or vasectomy (3%); and fertility-based awareness (1%) and
other methods (3%). Eight percent of all female users exited their last encounter with no
contraceptive method because they were either pregnant or seeking pregnancy.
Title X-funded cervical and breast cancer screening services are necessary for early
detection and treatment. In 2019, Title X providers conducted Papanicolaou (Pap) testing
on 20% (541,661) of female users. Thirteen percent of the 561,534 Pap tests performed had
an indeterminate or abnormal result requiring further evaluation and possible treatment. In
addition, providers performed clinical breast exams on 23% (627,282) of female users and
referred 5% of those examined for further evaluation based on abnormal findings.
Title X-funded STD and HIV services provide testing necessary for preventing disease
transmission and adverse health consequences. In 2019, Title X providers tested 58%
(644,080) of female users under 25 for chlamydia. Providers also performed 1.8 million
gonorrhea tests (5.7 tests per 10 users), 961,859 confidential HIV tests (3.1 tests per
10 users), and 674,764 syphilis tests (2.2 tests per 10 users). Of the confidential HIV tests
performed, 3,685 (3.8 per 1,000 tests performed) were positive for HIV.
Title X providers deliver male-focused family planning and reproductive health services
to a growing number of male clients. In 2019, 13% (405,114) of all Title X users were men.
Most male users were in their 20s (39%) or 30s (23%), and more than two-thirds (69%)
adopted or continued use of condoms or another contraceptive method at exit from their last
encounter. In addition, Title X providers tested 61% of all male users for chlamydia and
provided testing for several other STDs, including gonorrhea (6.8 tests per 10 male users),
HIV (5.3 tests per 10 male users), and syphilis (3.9 tests per 10 male users).

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

ES-3

A variety of qualified health providers deliver Title X-funded clinical services. In 2019,
3,678 full-time equivalent (FTE) clinical services providers (CSPs) delivered Title X-funded
care. Nurse practitioners, certified nurse midwives, and physician assistants accounted for
67% of total CSP FTEs, followed by physicians (24%) and registered nurses with an
expanded scope of practice (9%). A CSP attended 77% of the 4.7 million family planning
encounters that took place in 2019.
Title X projects rely on revenue from a mixture of public and private sources. In 2019,
Title X grantees reported total project revenue of over $1.0 billion to support their approved
Title X services projects. Six sources accounted for 86% of total revenue: Medicaid,
including the Children’s Health Insurance Program (36%, or $370.9 million); Title X (22%,
or $229.0 million); state governments (11%, or $110.0 million); private third-party payers
(10%, or $107.5 million); client service fees (4%, or $40.1 million); and local governments
(3%, or $30.1 million). With declines in all major revenue sources, total project revenue
(constant 2019 dollars) in 2019 was 24% lower (by $322.3 million) than in 2018 and 37%
lower (by $597.6 million) than in 2009.
Summary. The 2019 FPAR data show that Title X providers continue to serve a
socioeconomically disadvantaged population and to deliver family planning and related
preventive health care meeting the highest national quality standards. During 2019, the
Title X program underwent substantial regulatory changes that affected the size and capacity
of the service network and, compared with 2018, reduced the number of clients who received
Title X-funded care. To offset the impact of the Final Rule on program services, in
September 2019, OPA redirected Title X funding to grantees that remained in the program.
Because of the timing of this additional funding, however, its impact is not reflected in the
2019 FPAR data.

ES-4

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

1 Introduction
TITLE X NATIONAL FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAM
The Title X National Family Planning Program, created in 1970 and authorized under Title X
of the Public Health Service Act,1 is administered by the Office of Population Affairs (OPA),
within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The Title X program is the
only federal program dedicated solely to the provision of family planning and related
preventive health care. This program is designed to provide “a broad range of acceptable and
effective family planning methods and services (including natural family planning methods,
infertility services, and services for adolescents)”,1. p. 1 with priority given to persons from
low-income families. In addition to offering these methods and services on a voluntary and
confidential basis, Title X-funded centers provide contraceptive education and counseling;
breast and cervical cancer screening; sexually transmitted disease (STD) and human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing, referral, and prevention education; and pregnancy
diagnosis and counseling.2,3 By law, Title X funds cannot be used by centers where abortion
is a method of family planning.2,3 In 2019, the program was implemented through grants * to a
total of 100 state and local public health departments and family planning, community health,
and other private nonprofit agencies. These grants supported delivery of Title X services in
approximately 3,800 sites. In fiscal year 2019, the Title X program received approximately
$286.5 million in federal Title X funding.4
On March 3, 2019, HHS issued a Final Rule7,8 that revised Title X regulations governing
several aspects of how Title X-funded projects deliver family planning care. OPA updated
Title X regulations to “clarify and ensure compliance with the statutory intent of the
program.”9 The Final Rule affected regulations related to the range of contraceptive method
options that projects must offer; information and services provided to women who learn that
they are pregnant (e.g., mandated referral to prenatal care and no abortion referrals);
eligibility for free or discounted care for women whose job-based insurance excludes
contraceptive coverage because of employers’ religious or moral objections; physical and
financial separation of projects from any abortion-related activities; and procedures,
assurances, and documentation requirements when serving minors.

*

In this report, the terms “grantee” and “grant” are synonymous. If an agency receives multiple grants to
support Title X services in different geographic areas (e.g., different states), OPA will require the agency
to submit separate Family Planning Annual Reports (FPARs) and the agency will appear more than once
in the Title X grantee count. In 2019, 91 agencies submitted one FPAR, three agencies submitted two
FPARs, and one agency submitted three FPARs.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

1

As a condition of their continued participation in Title X and pursuant to court orders,
grantees were required to comply by July 15, 2019 with all requirements of the Final Rule,
except for the physical separation requirements. In addition, by August 19, 2019, grantees
were required to submit an “Assurance and Action Plan” documenting the steps they would
take to comply with the Final Rule and a written statement with supporting evidence
demonstrating that their Title X project was in compliance. Compliance with the physical
separation requirements was required starting March 4, 2020.
After HHS implemented the Title X Final Rule, 18 agencies representing 19 grants and 231
subrecipients discontinued participating in the program; the number of Title X-funded service
sites was reduced by 945 sites. Because of the timeline for complying with the Final Rule,
grantees that withdrew for this reason reported Family Planning Annual Report (FPAR) data
for less than the full 12-month reporting period. Additionally, nine other grants ended for
other reasons in 2019. As a result, the numbers of family planning users and encounters,
project revenue, and other performance measures decreased compared with 2018. In
September 2019, OPA awarded $33.7 million in supplemental grants to 50 existing grantees
to offset the impact of the withdrawals. These grants were intended to support providing
family planning services in areas that were underserved or left unserved by agencies that
withdrew from the program. For more information about the Title X Final Rule, please visit
the OPA website: Compliance with Statutory Program Integrity Requirements

FAMILY PLANNING ANNUAL REPORT
The FPAR5 is the only source of uniform reporting by all Title X services grantees. The
FPAR provides consistent, national-level data on program users, service providers, utilization
of family planning and related preventive health services, and sources of program revenue.
Annual submission of the FPAR is required of all Title X services grantees for purposes of
monitoring and reporting program performance.6 The FPAR data are presented in summary
form to protect the confidentiality of the persons who receive Title X-funded services.3
Title X administrators and grantees use FPAR data to

▪ monitor compliance with statutory requirements;
▪ comply with accountability and federal performance reporting requirements for Title X
family planning funds, including but not limited to the Government Performance and
Results Modernization Act and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB);

▪ guide strategic and financial planning and respond to inquiries from policy makers and
Congress about the program; and

▪ estimate the impact of Title X-funded activities on key reproductive health outcomes,

including prevention of unintended pregnancy, infertility, and invasive cervical cancer.5

2

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

REPORT STRUCTURE
The Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary presents data for the 100
Title X services grantees that submitted an FPAR for the 2019 reporting period
(January 1, 2019, through December 31, 2019). The National Summary has eight sections:

▪ Section 1—Introduction—describes the Title X National Family Planning Program and
the role of FPAR data in managing and monitoring the performance of the Title X
program.

▪ Section 2—FPAR Methodology—describes the procedures for collecting, reporting, and
validating FPAR data and presents the definitions for key FPAR terms.

▪ Sections 3 through 7—present the results for each FPAR table and include a discussion of
national and regional patterns and trends for selected indicators. These sections also
include text boxes with the definitions for key FPAR terms and selected guidance specific
to each FPAR table. Please see the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and
Instructions (Reissued October 2016)5 for complete FPAR reporting instructions.

▪ Section 8—References—is a list of National Summary references.
Additional data for the National Summary are included in three appendices: Appendix A
presents trend data for selected indicators for 2009 through 2019. Appendix B presents 2019
data for selected indicators by state, which includes the 50 states, the District of Columbia,
and the eight U.S. territories and Freely Associated States (American Samoa, Commonwealth
of the Northern Mariana Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Guam, Puerto Rico,
Republic of the Marshall Islands, Republic of Palau, and the U.S. Virgin Islands).
Appendix B exhibits present state-level information on the characteristics of the Title X
network (number of grantees, subrecipients, and service sites) and the number and
distribution of Title X family planning users served by sex, income level, health insurance
coverage status (overall and by Medicaid expansion status), contraceptive use, and chlamydia
testing. Appendix C contains general and table-specific notes about the data presented in this
report.
Throughout this report, we use the term “table” when referring to an FPAR reporting table
and “exhibit” when referring to both the tabular and graphical presentations of the 2019 or
trend data. The exhibits throughout the report present results for Title X overall and for each
of the 10 HHS regions (Exhibit 1); the source of data (i.e., FPAR reporting table) for each
exhibit is noted. The 10 HHS regions (and regional office locations) are as follows:

▪ Region I (Boston, MA)—Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, and Vermont

▪ Region II (New York, NY)—New Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin
Islands

▪ Region III (Philadelphia, PA)—Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West
Virginia, and Washington, DC

▪ Region IV (Atlanta, GA)—Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

3

▪ Region V (Chicago, IL)—Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin
▪ Region VI (Dallas, TX)—Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas
▪ Region VII (Kansas City, MO)—Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska
▪ Region VIII (Denver, CO)—Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and
Wyoming

▪ Region IX (San Francisco, CA)—Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, American Samoa,
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Guam,
Republic of the Marshall Islands, and Republic of Palau

▪ Region X (Seattle, WA)—Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington
Exhibit 1.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services regions

Note:
Due to rounding, percentages cited in text may not match summed percentages from the
exhibits.

4

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

2 FPAR Methodology
DATA COLLECTION
The Title X Family Planning Annual Report (FPAR): Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016)5 consists of 15 reporting tables. The FPAR instructions provide definitions for
key FPAR terms to ensure uniform reporting by Title X grantees. The key terms describe the
individuals receiving family planning and related preventive health services at Title X-funded
service sites, the range and scope of the services provided, and the family planning providers
that render care.
Title X services grantees are required to submit the FPAR by February 15 for the recently
completed reporting period (January 1 through December 31). In February 2020, FPARs for
100 grantees were submitted for the 2019 reporting period. Almost all (88%) FPARs were
submitted by the due date, and all were submitted using the web-based FPAR Data System
(https://fpar.opa.hhs.gov/).

DATA VALIDATION
FPAR data undergo both electronic and manual validations prior to tabulation. During data
entry, the FPAR Data System performs a set of automated validation procedures that ensure
consistency within and across tables. These validation procedures include calculation of row
and column totals and cross-table comparisons of selected cell values. Each validation
procedure is based on a validation rule that defines which table cells to compare and what
condition or validation test to apply.
After a grantee submits an FPAR, it goes through two levels of review by HHS staff. First,
OPA Project Officers review the FPAR and either accept it or return it to the grantee for
correction or clarification. Once the OPA Project Officer accepts the FPAR, the FPAR Data
Coordinator performs a second and final review, either accepting the FPAR or returning it to
the OPA Project Officer and the grantee for correction or clarification. When the FPAR Data
Coordinator has accepted all FPARs, RTI International extracts the FPAR data from the
FPAR Data System database and performs further electronic validations to identify potential
reporting errors and problems, including missing and out-of-range values for selected
measures (e.g., STD test-to-user ratios). RTI also performs a manual review of all comments
entered into the FPAR table “Note” fields.
RTI summarizes the results of the electronic and manual validations in a grantee-specific
report, compiled by region, which RTI sends to the FPAR Data Coordinator for follow-up
and resolution. Once OPA staff and grantees address all outstanding validation issues in the
FPAR Data System, RTI extracts the final data file for tabulation and analysis.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

5

Selected Key Terms and Definitions for FPAR Reporting
Family Planning User—An individual who has at least one
family planning encounter at a Title X service site during the
reporting period. The same individual may be counted as a
family planning user only once during a reporting period.
Family Planning Encounter—A documented, face-to-face
contact between an individual and a family planning provider
that takes place in a Title X service site. The purpose of a
family planning encounter is to provide family planning and
related preventive health services to female and male clients
who want to avoid unintended pregnancies or achieve
intended pregnancies. Laboratory tests and related
counseling and education do not constitute a family planning
encounter unless the encounter is face-to-face, documented,
and includes family planning counseling or education.
The two types of family planning encounters are classified
based on the type of family planning provider who renders
the care: encounter with a Clinical Services Provider or
encounter with an Other Services Provider.
Family Planning Provider—The individual who assumes
primary responsibility for assessing a client and documenting
services in the client record. Providers exercise independent
judgment as to the services rendered to the client during an
encounter. There are two types of family planning providers:
■

Clinical Services Providers (CSPs) include physicians,
physician assistants, nurse practitioners, certified nurse
midwives, and registered nurses with an expanded scope
of practice who are trained and permitted by state-specific
regulations to perform all aspects of the user (male and
female) physical assessments recommended for
contraceptive, related preventive health, and basic
infertility care. CSPs offer a range of clinical, counseling,
and educational services relating to a client’s proposed or
adopted method of contraception, general reproductive
health, or infertility treatment, in accordance with Title X
program requirements.2

■

Other Services Providers include other agency staff
(e.g., registered nurses, public health nurses, licensed
vocational or licensed practical nurses, certified nurse
assistants, health educators, social workers, or clinic
aides) that offer client education, counseling, referral, or
follow-up services relating to the client’s proposed or
adopted method of contraception, general reproductive
health, or infertility treatment, in accordance with Title X
program requirements.2

Other Services Providers (continued) Other Services
Providers may also perform or obtain samples for routine
laboratory tests (e.g., urine, pregnancy, STD, and
cholesterol and lipid analysis), give contraceptive injections
(e.g., Depo-Provera), and perform routine clinical procedures
that may include some aspects of the user physical
assessment (e.g., blood pressure evaluation), in accordance
with Title X program requirements.2
Family Planning Service Site—A family planning service
site is an established unit where grantee or subrecipient
agency staff provide Title X services (clinical, counseling,
educational, or referral) that comply with Title X program
requirements2 and where at least some of the encounters
between the family planning providers and the individuals
served meet the requirements of a family planning
encounter. Established units include clinics, hospital
outpatient departments, homeless shelters, detention and
correctional facilities, and other locations where Title X
agency staff provide these family planning services. Service
sites may also include equipped mobile vans or schools.
Client Records—Title X projects must establish a medical
record for every client who is counted as a Title X user,
including but not limited to those who obtain clinical services
or other screening or laboratory services (e.g., blood
pressure check, urine-based pregnancy, or STD test). The
medical record contains personal data; a medical history;
physical exam data; laboratory test orders, results, and
follow-up; treatment and special instructions; scheduled
revisits; informed consent forms; documentation of refusal of
services; and information on allergies and untoward
reactions to identified drug(s). The medical record also
contains clinical findings; diagnostic and therapeutic orders;
and documentation of continuing care, referral, and
follow-up. The medical record allows for entries by
counseling and social service staff. The medical record is a
confidential record, accessible only to authorized staff and
secured by lock when not in use. The client medical record
must contain sufficient information to identify the client,
indicate where and how the client can be contacted, justify
the clinical impression or diagnosis, and warrant the
treatment and end results. If a family planning user receives
no clinical services, the provider still must establish a client
record that enables the site to complete the required FPAR
data reporting.

Note: For detailed reporting guidance, please refer to the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016), pp. 7–10.5

6

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

3 Title X Network Characteristics
TITLE X SERVICE NETWORK PROFILE
In 2019, Title X-funded services were implemented through grants to 100 agencies: 47 (47%)
state and local health departments and 53 (53%) nonprofit family planning and community
health agencies. This funding supported a service network that included 1,060 subrecipients
and 3,825 service sites in the 50 United States, the District of Columbia, and the eight U.S.
territories and Freely Associated States (Exhibit 2). In 2019, the Title X program had 1 more
grantee than in 2018 (100 vs. 99), 68 fewer subrecipients (1,060 vs. 1,128), and 129 fewer
service sites (3,825 vs. 3,954) (Exhibit 2).
During 2019, 28 grantees discontinued participation in the Title X program and contributed
less than 12 months of FPAR data, which resulted in decreases in the numbers of users,
encounters, and other performance measures. Of the 28 grants that did not continue, 19 grants
(administered by 18 agencies) exited because of the Final Rule and 9 grants (administered by
8 agencies) reached the end of their funding period.
Comparing data from 2019 and 2009 shows that the number of grantees increased by 12%
(100 in 2019 and 89 in 2009), the number of subrecipients decreased by 8% (1,060 vs. 1,157),
and the number of service sites decreased by 15% (3,825 vs. 4,515). As noted in Section 1,
implementation of the Final Rule also resulted in the withdrawal of 231 subrecipients and loss
of 945 service sites. Exhibits A–1a and A–1b in Appendix A present trends (2009–2019) in
the number of grantees, subrecipients, and service sites overall and by region.
Exhibit 2.

Number of and percentage change in grantees, subrecipients, and service sites, by year and
region: 2018–2019 (Source: FPAR Grantee Profile Cover Sheet)

Network
Feature

All
Regions

Grantees
2019

100

10

8

12

12

12

9

6

6

19

6

2018

99

12

8

12

11

13

8

5

6

18

6

Difference

1

−2

0

0

1

−1

1

1

0

1

0

% Change

1%

0%

0%

9%

−8%

13%

20%

0%

6%

0%

Subrecipients
2019
2018
Difference
% Change
Service Sites
2019

Region
I

−17%

Region
II

Region
III

Region
IV

Region
V

Region
VI

Region
VII

Region
VIII

Region
IX

Region
X

1,060

61

68

173

271

134

46

92

62

86

67

1,128

75

72

218

267

131

48

93

68

89

67

−68

−14

−4

−45

4

3

−2

−1

−6

−3

0

−19%

−6%

−21%

1%

2%

−4%

−1%

−9%

−3%

0%

−6%
3,825

214

237

614

910

394

466

197

157

391

245

2018

3,954

242

241

626

900

388

468

202

170

478

239

Difference

−129

−28

−4

−12

10

6

−2

−5

−13

−87

6

−12%

−2%

−18%

3%

% Change

−3%

−2%

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

1%

2%

0%†

−2%

−8%

7

Selected Guidance for Reporting User Demographic Profile Data in FPAR Tables 1 through 3
In FPAR Table 1, grantees report the unduplicated number
of female and male users by age group. Grantees
categorize users by age group base on the users’ age as
of June 30 of the reporting period.
In FPAR Table 2 and Table 3, grantees report the
unduplicated number of female (Table 2) and male
(Table 3) users by ethnicity and race.
The FPAR categories for reporting ethnicity and race
conform to the OMB 1997 Revisions to the Standards for the
Classification of Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity12 and
are used by other HHS programs and compilers of such
national data sets as the National Survey of Family Growth.
The two minimum OMB categories for reporting ethnicity are:
■

■

Hispanic or Latino (All Races)—A person of Cuban,
Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or
other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
Not Hispanic or Latino (All Races)—A person not of
Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central
American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of
race.

The five minimum OMB categories for reporting race:
■

American Indian or Alaska Native—A person having
origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
America (including Central America) and who maintains
tribal affiliation or community attachment.

■

Asian—A person having origins in any of the original
peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian
subcontinent including, for example, Cambodia, China,
India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine
Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.

■

Black or African American—A person having origins in
any of the black racial groups of Africa.

■

Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander—A person
having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii,
Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.

■

White—A person having origins in any of the original
peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa.

OMB encourages self-identification of race, and the FPAR
tables allow grantees to report the number of users who
self-identify with two or more of the OMB race categories.

Note: For detailed reporting guidance, please refer to the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016), pp. 15–17, A-1–A-2.5

8

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

4 Family Planning User Characteristics
DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE
Total Users (Exhibit 3)
In 2019, Title X-funded sites served almost 3.1 million family planning users. Grantees in
Regions IV and IX combined to serve more than 2 of every 5 Title X users, while in each of
Regions II, III, V, and VI, grantees served between 10% and 12% of all Title X users. The
number of users served in 2019 was 21% lower (by 844,083 users) than in 2018. Nine regions
reported a decline in users, with Region IX grantees reporting the largest numeric decline (by
377,909) (Exhibit 3). On average, the number of users per service site decreased by 187, from
996 (2018) to 809 (2019) (Exhibit A–1c).

Compared with 2009, the number of family planning users served in 2019 (3.1 million) was
40% lower than in 2009 (5.2 million) and 41% lower than the highest number of users
(5.2 million) ever served by the program in a single year (2010) (Exhibits A–2a and A–2b).

Exhibit 3.

Number, distribution, and percentage change in number of all family planning users, by year and
region: 2018–2019 (Source: FPAR Table 1)
Region
II

Region
III

Region
IV

Region
V

Region
VI

Region
VII

Region
VIII

Region
IX

Region
X

3,095,666 145,737

308,031

374,499

648,599

295,108 321,395

110,363

104,814

666,147

120,973

2018

3,939,749 201,188

436,971

472,832

642,224

403,080 334,107

116,928

131,148

1,044,056

157,215

Difference

−844,083 −55,451

−128,940

−98,333

−6,565 −26,334

−377,909

−36,242

Users
Number
2019

All
Regions

Region
I

6,375 −107,972 −12,712

% Change

−21%

−28%

−30%

−21%

1%

−27%

−4%

−6%

−20%

−36%

−23%

Distribution
2019

100%

5%

10%

12%

21%

10%

10%

4%

3%

22%

4%

100%

5%

11%

12%

16%

10%

8%

3%

3%

27%

4%

2018

Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

9

Users by Sex (Exhibits 4 and 5)
Of the 3.1 million family planning users served in 2019, 87% (2.7 million) were female, and
13% (405,114) were male (Exhibits 4 and 5). The percentage of total users who were female
was high across all regions (82% to 92%) and states (70% to 100%) (Exhibit B–1).
From 2009 through 2019, the percentage of users who were female declined from 93% to
87%, and the percentage of users who were male increased from 7% to 13%. Numerically, the
number of female users decreased 44%, from 4.8 million (2009) to 2.7 million (2019), while
the number of male users increased 8%, from 374,576 (2009) to 405,114 (2019)
(Exhibits A–2a and A–2b).

Users by Age (Exhibits 4 and 5)
In 2019, 17% (530,411) of all family planning users were under 20 years of age, 44%
(1.4 million) were 20 to 29 years of age, and 39% (1.2 million) were 30 years of age or older.
The same percentages of female and male users were in their teens (17%), a higher
percentage of female (44%) than male (39%) users was in their 20s, and a higher percentage
of male (44%) than female (38%) users was 30 or over. Across regions, there was wider
variation in the age distribution of male users than of female users (Exhibits 4 and 5).
From 2009 through 2019, there were changes in the age composition of Title X users. During
this period, the percentage of users in their teens decreased from 24% to 17% of total users,
the percentage in their 20s decreased from 50% to 44%, and the percentage 30 or older
increased from 26% to 39%. Numerically, the number of teen users decreased 57%, from
1.2 million (2009) to 530,411 (2019); the number in their 20s decreased 48%, from
2.6 million (2009) to 1.4 million (2019); and the number of users 30 or older decreased 10%,
from 1.3 million (2009) to 1.2 million (2019). Exhibits A–3a and A–3b present trends (2009
through 2019) in the distribution of all family planning users by age group.

10

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

11

12

Exhibit 4.

Number of all family planning users, by sex, age, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 1)

Age Group (Years)

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X
1,167

Female Users
Under 15

34,021

2,067

2,425

7,659

8,503

2,434

3,268

1,208

1,227

4,063

15 to 17

180,610

9,608

15,090

26,381

36,655

18,172

18,767

7,813

7,839

30,418

9,867

18 to 19

248,502

10,780

23,640

28,736

50,129

27,255

25,637

10,183

10,492

49,870

11,780

20 to 24

643,155

26,971

64,799

66,593

126,616

69,840

63,809

22,971

24,019

148,057

29,480

25 to 29

552,984

24,516

56,987

60,445

114,335

54,954

56,419

18,308

15,698

128,037

23,285

30 to 34

405,404

18,933

42,696

47,666

89,695

35,554

44,678

13,838

11,008

85,879

15,457

35 to 39

281,785

13,179

29,416

33,817

63,006

23,384

33,677

10,253

7,702

57,281

10,070

40 to 44

175,973

8,517

17,981

21,854

38,314

13,444

20,830

6,315

4,609

38,261

5,848

Over 44

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

168,118

7,769

16,608

26,049

38,991

10,736

18,020

6,186

3,562

36,033

4,164

Subtotal

2,690,552

122,340

269,642

319,200

566,244

255,773

285,105

97,075

86,156

577,899

111,118

Male Users
Under 15

13,815

1,117

1,025

4,184

4,215

393

722

174

436

1,513

36

15 to 17

25,695

2,329

2,715

6,238

4,770

1,324

1,996

657

1,082

4,101

483

18 to 19

27,768

1,716

3,409

4,140

4,260

2,618

2,793

1,236

1,307

5,615

674

20 to 24

81,430

4,188

8,772

9,382

11,890

10,490

6,902

3,717

4,354

19,609

2,126

25 to 29

76,526

4,149

7,744

8,182

11,707

9,435

6,486

2,754

4,239

19,788

2,042

30 to 34

54,777

3,116

5,676

5,999

9,576

5,828

5,040

1,815

2,833

13,334

1,560

35 to 39

38,400

2,141

3,307

4,422

8,016

3,531

4,120

1,202

1,696

8,826

1,139

40 to 44

26,424

1,503

2,112

3,091

6,642

2,169

3,096

666

1,076

5,332

737

Over 44

60,279

3,138

3,629

9,661

21,279

3,547

5,135

1,067

1,635

10,130

1,058

Subtotal

405,114

23,397

38,389

55,299

82,355

39,335

36,290

13,288

18,658

88,248

9,855

All Users
Under 15

47,836

3,184

3,450

11,843

12,718

2,827

3,990

1,382

1,663

5,576

1,203

15 to 17

206,305

11,937

17,805

32,619

41,425

19,496

20,763

8,470

8,921

34,519

10,350

18 to 19

276,270

12,496

27,049

32,876

54,389

29,873

28,430

11,419

11,799

55,485

12,454

20 to 24

724,585

31,159

73,571

75,975

138,506

80,330

70,711

26,688

28,373

167,666

31,606

25 to 29

629,510

28,665

64,731

68,627

126,042

64,389

62,905

21,062

19,937

147,825

25,327

30 to 34

460,181

22,049

48,372

53,665

99,271

41,382

49,718

15,653

13,841

99,213

17,017

35 to 39

320,185

15,320

32,723

38,239

71,022

26,915

37,797

11,455

9,398

66,107

11,209

40 to 44

202,397

10,020

20,093

24,945

44,956

15,613

23,926

6,981

5,685

43,593

6,585

Over 44

228,397

10,907

20,237

35,710

60,270

14,283

23,155

7,253

5,197

46,163

5,222

3,095,666

145,737

308,031

374,499

648,599

295,108

321,395

110,363

104,814

666,147

120,973

Total All Users

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 5.

Distribution of all family planning users, by sex, age, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 1)

Age Group (Years)

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

Female Users
Under 15
15 to 17
18 to 19
20 to 24
25 to 29
30 to 34
35 to 39
40 to 44
Over 44
Subtotal

1%
7%
9%
24%
21%
15%
10%
7%
6%
100%

2%
8%
9%
22%
20%
15%
11%
7%
6%
100%

1%
6%
9%
24%
21%
16%
11%
7%
6%
100%

2%
8%
9%
21%
19%
15%
11%
7%
8%
100%

2%
6%
9%
22%
20%
16%
11%
7%
7%
100%

1%
7%
11%
27%
21%
14%
9%
5%
4%
100%

1%
7%
9%
22%
20%
16%
12%
7%
6%
100%

1%
8%
10%
24%
19%
14%
11%
7%
6%
100%

1%
9%
12%
28%
18%
13%
9%
5%
4%
100%

1%
5%
9%
26%
22%
15%
10%
7%
6%
100%

1%
9%
11%
27%
21%
14%
9%
5%
4%
100%

Male Users
Under 15
15 to 17
18 to 19
20 to 24
25 to 29
30 to 34
35 to 39
40 to 44
Over 44
Subtotal

3%
6%
7%
20%
19%
14%
9%
7%
15%
100%

5%
10%
7%
18%
18%
13%
9%
6%
13%
100%

3%
7%
9%
23%
20%
15%
9%
6%
9%
100%

8%
11%
7%
17%
15%
11%
8%
6%
17%
100%

5%
6%
5%
14%
14%
12%
10%
8%
26%
100%

1%
3%
7%
27%
24%
15%
9%
6%
9%
100%

2%
6%
8%
19%
18%
14%
11%
9%
14%
100%

1%
5%
9%
28%
21%
14%
9%
5%
8%
100%

2%
6%
7%
23%
23%
15%
9%
6%
9%
100%

2%
5%
6%
22%
22%
15%
10%
6%
11%
100%

0%†
5%
7%
22%
21%
16%
12%
7%
11%
100%

All Users
Under 15
15 to 17
18 to 19
20 to 24
25 to 29
30 to 34
35 to 39
40 to 44
Over 44
Total All Users

2%
7%
9%
23%
20%
15%
10%
7%
7%
100%

2%
8%
9%
21%
20%
15%
11%
7%
7%
100%

1%
6%
9%
24%
21%
16%
11%
7%
7%
100%

3%
9%
9%
20%
18%
14%
10%
7%
10%
100%

2%
6%
8%
21%
19%
15%
11%
7%
9%
100%

1%
7%
10%
27%
22%
14%
9%
5%
5%
100%

1%
6%
9%
22%
20%
15%
12%
7%
7%
100%

1%
8%
10%
24%
19%
14%
10%
6%
7%
100%

2%
9%
11%
27%
19%
13%
9%
5%
5%
100%

1%
5%
8%
25%
22%
15%
10%
7%
7%
100%

1%
9%
10%
26%
21%
14%
9%
5%
4%
100%

87%
13%

84%
16%

88%
12%

85%
15%

87%
13%

87%
13%

89%
11%

88%
12%

82%
18%

87%
13%

92%
8%

Female Users
Male Users

13

Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Users by Race (Exhibits 6 through 14)
In 2019, 54% (1.7 million) of all family planning users identified themselves as white, 24%
(732,825) as black or African American, 3% (89,045) as Asian, and 1% each as either
American Indian or Alaska Native (29,373) or Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
(22,327). Four percent (110,372) of all users self-identified with two or more of the five
minimum race categories specified by OMB,12 and race was either unknown or not reported
for 14% (434,100). Of the 434,100 users with an unknown race, 70% self-identified as
Hispanic or Latino ethnicity (Exhibit 6).

▪ By sex, the racial composition of female (Exhibits 7, 11, and 12) and male users

(Exhibits 8, 13, and 14) differed slightly in terms of the percentages in each group that
self-identified as white (55% of female users vs. 49% of male users) and black or African
American (23% of female users vs. 31% of male users).

▪ By region, the distribution of users by race varied widely (Exhibits 9 and 10). The

percentage of users who self-identified as white ranged from 43% to 75%, 5% to 40%
self-identified as black or African American, 1% to 6% self-identified as Asian, and 2% to
8% self-identified with two or more race categories.

Exhibits A–4a and A–4b present trends (2009 through 2019) in the distribution of all family
planning users by self-identified race.

Users by Ethnicity (Exhibits 6 through 14)
In 2019, 33% (1.0 million) of users self-identified as Hispanic or Latino ethnicity (Exhibit 6).

▪ By sex, 34% of female users and 27% of male users self-identified as Hispanic or Latino,
while ethnicity was unknown for 4% of female users and 6% of male users
(Exhibits 7, 8, 11–14).

▪ By region, the percentage of users that self-identified as Hispanic or Latino ranged from
17% to 52%, with grantees in Regions II, VI, and IX reporting the highest percentages
(44% to 52%) of Hispanic or Latino users (Exhibits 9 and 10).

See Exhibits A–5a and A–5b for trends (2009 through 2019) in the distribution of all family
planning users by self-identified Hispanic or Latino ethnicity.
See Exhibits A–6a and A–6b for trends (2009 through 2019) in the distribution of all family
planning users by self-identified race and Hispanic or Latino ethnicity.

14

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 6.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by race and ethnicity: 2019
(Source: FPAR Tables 2 and 3)
Hispanic
or Latino

Race
Am Indian/Alaska Native
Asian
Black/African American
Nat Hawaiian/Pac Island
White
More than one race
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

Not
Hispanic or
Latino

Ethnicity
UK/NR

Total

%
Hispanic
or Latino

%
%
Not Hispanic Ethnicity
UK/NR
or Latino

%
Total

11,713

16,476

1,184

29,373

0%†

1%

0%†

1%

3,538

80,588

4,919

89,045

0%†

3%

0%†

3%

32,189

679,361

21,275

732,825

1%

22%

1%

24%

4,780

16,778

769

22,327

1%

0%†

1%

618,498

1,004,060

55,066

1,677,624

20%

0%†

32%

2%

54%

61,815

42,730

5,827

110,372

2%

1%

0%†

4%

304,268

80,235

49,597

434,100

10%

3%

2%

14%

1,036,801

1,920,228

138,637

3,095,666

33%

62%

4%

100%

Am Indian/Alaska Native=American Indian or Alaska Native. Nat Hawaiian/Pac Island=Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Exhibit 7.

Number and distribution of female family planning users, by race and ethnicity: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 2)
Hispanic
or Latino

Race
Am Indian/Alaska Native

Not
Hispanic or
Latino

Ethnicity
UK/NR

Total

%
Hispanic
or Latino

%
%
Not Hispanic Ethnicity
UK/NR
or Latino

%
Total

10,430

14,495

922

25,847

0%†

1%

0%†

1%

3,123

72,231

4,208

79,562

0%†

3%

0%†

3%

Black/African American

26,994

563,847

16,936

607,777

1%

21%

1%

23%

Nat Hawaiian/Pac Island

4,117

15,069

667

19,853

0%†

1%

0%†

1%

558,401

876,498

45,806

1,480,705

21%

33%

2%

55%

Asian

White
More than one race

53,054

37,502

4,700

95,256

2%

1%

0%†

4%

Unknown/not reported

270,552

68,827

42,173

381,552

10%

3%

2%

14%

Total Female Users

926,671

1,648,469

115,412

2,690,552

34%

61%

4%

100%

Am Indian/Alaska Native=American Indian or Alaska Native. Nat Hawaiian/Pac Island=Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Exhibit 8.

Number and distribution of male family planning users, by race and ethnicity: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 3)

Race
Am Indian/Alaska Native
Asian
Black/African American
Nat Hawaiian/Pac Island
White
More than one race
Unknown/not reported
Total Male Users

Hispanic
or Latino
1,283

Not
Hispanic or
Latino
1,981

Ethnicity
UK/NR
262

Total

%
Hispanic
or Latino

3,526

0%†

%
%
Not Hispanic Ethnicity
UK/NR
or Latino

%
Total

0%†

0%†

1%

0%†

2%

0%†

2%

1%

29%

1%

31%

0%†

1%

415

8,357

711

9,483

5,195

115,514

4,339

125,048

663

1,709

102

2,474

60,097

127,562

9,260

196,919

15%

31%

2%

49%

8,761

5,228

1,127

15,116

2%

1%

0%†

4%

33,716

11,408

7,424

52,548

8%

3%

2%

13%

110,130

271,759

23,225

405,114

27%

67%

6%

100%

0%†

0%†

Am Indian/Alaska Native=American Indian or Alaska Native. Nat Hawaiian/Pac Island=Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

15

16

Exhibit 9.

Number of all family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Tables 2 and 3)

Race and Ethnicity
American Indian or Alaska Native
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

11,713
16,476
1,184
29,373

204
432
80
716

1,706
777
3
2,486

1,213
3,596
250
5,059

2,930
1,424
27
4,381

863
1,329
65
2,257

541
2,645
197
3,383

351
614
36
1,001

774
1,254
48
2,076

2,578
2,938
473
5,989

553
1,467
5
2,025

3,538
80,588
4,919
89,045

97
7,262
157
7,516

479
8,990
49
9,518

259
6,585
708
7,552

294
6,329
105
6,728

155
6,202
240
6,597

151
2,799
41
2,991

98
1,921
125
2,144

59
2,043
84
2,186

1,780
32,935
3,401
38,116

166
5,522
9
5,697

32,189
679,361
21,275
732,825

3,617
23,267
572
27,456

13,245
69,710
554
83,509

4,088
113,297
8,311
125,696

3,354
249,330
4,038
256,722

1,484
73,131
2,046
76,661

1,671
69,557
431
71,659

1,078
18,757
854
20,689

357
7,152
267
7,776

2,850
49,854
4,195
56,899

445
5,306
7
5,758

4,780
16,778
769
22,327

590
181
16
787

663
343
3
1,009

401
407
76
884

973
679
74
1,726

373
412
26
811

390
551
6
947

120
213
11
344

69
360
25
454

971
12,499
529
13,999

230
1,133
3
1,366

618,498
1,004,060
55,066
1,677,624

19,821
58,361
4,252
82,434

55,374
75,943
472
131,789

34,704
114,356
21,503
170,563

108,677
226,554
4,091
339,322

28,852
142,231
2,842
173,925

139,935
83,238
404
223,577

22,443
55,116
1,636
79,195

24,445
52,775
1,693
78,913

169,483
127,168
18,121
314,772

14,764
68,318
52
83,134

More Than One Race
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

61,815
42,730
5,827
110,372

7,177
4,272
293
11,742

16,445
3,405
107
19,957

5,863
2,295
430
8,588

6,577
5,237
1,545
13,359

3,574
7,931
349
11,854

3,913
4,344
60
8,317

1,325
1,680
223
3,228

598
1,155
80
1,833

15,590
9,198
2,735
27,523

753
3,213
5
3,971

Race Unknown or Not Reported
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

304,268
80,235
49,597
434,100

9,618
3,064
2,404
15,086

48,347
10,466
950
59,763

34,116
14,088
7,953
56,157

14,981
6,740
4,640
26,361

15,726
4,737
2,540
23,003

2,868
888
6,765
10,521

2,292
937
533
3,762

8,356
2,152
1,068
11,576

155,811
30,336
22,702
208,849

12,153
6,827
42
19,022

1,036,801
1,920,228
138,637
3,095,666

41,124
96,839
7,774
145,737

136,259
169,634
2,138
308,031

80,644
254,624
39,231
374,499

137,786
496,293
14,520
648,599

51,027
235,973
8,108
295,108

149,469
164,022
7,904
321,395

27,707
79,238
3,418
110,363

34,658
66,891
3,265
104,814

349,063
264,928
52,156
666,147

29,064
91,786
123
120,973

Asian
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Black or African American
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
White
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

All Races
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 10. Distribution of all family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Tables 2 and 3)
Race and Ethnicity
American Indian or Alaska Native
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Asian
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Black or African American
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
White
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
More Than One Race
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Race Unknown or Not Reported
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
All Races
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

All Regions

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

1%
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
2%

0%†
3%
0%†
3%

0%†
5%
0%†
5%

0%†
3%
0%†
3%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
5%
1%
6%

0%†
5%
0%†
5%

2%
16%
0%†
19%

4%
23%
0%†
27%

0%†
7%
0%†
7%

0%†
7%
1%
9%

0%†
4%
0%†
5%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

1%
22%
1%
24%
0%†
1%
0%†
1%
20%
32%
2%
54%
2%
1%
0%†
4%

14%
40%
3%
57%
5%
3%
0%†
8%

10%
3%
2%
14%

7%
2%
2%
10%

33%
62%
4%
100%

28%
66%
5%
100%

Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Region I

18%
25%
0%†
43%
5%
1%
0%†
6%
16%
3%
0%†
19%
44%
55%
1%
100%

1%
30%
2%
34%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
9%
31%
6%
46%
2%
1%
0%†
2%

1%
38%
1%
40%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
17%
35%
1%
52%

1%
25%
1%
26%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
10%
48%
1%
59%

1%
22%
0%†
22%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
44%
26%
0%†
70%

1%
17%
1%
19%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
20%
50%
1%
72%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

1%
3%
0%†
4%

1%
1%
0%†
3%

1%
2%
0%†
3%

9%
4%
2%
15%

2%
1%
1%
4%

5%
2%
1%
8%

1%
0%†
2%
3%

2%
1%
0%†
3%

22%
68%
10%
100%

21%
77%
2%
100%

17%
80%
3%
100%

47%
51%
2%
100%

25%
72%
3%
100%

23%
50%
2%
75%
1%
1%
0%†
2%

25%
19%
3%
47%
2%
1%
0%†
4%

12%
56%
0%†
69%
1%
3%
0%†
3%

8%
2%
1%
11%

23%
5%
3%
31%

10%
6%
0%†
16%

33%
64%
3%
100%

52%
40%
8%
100%

24%
76%
0%†
100%

17

18

Exhibit 11. Number of female family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 2)
Race and Ethnicity
American Indian or Alaska Native
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Asian
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Black or African American
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
White
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
More Than One Race
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Race Unknown or Not Reported
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
All Races
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

10,430
14,495
922
25,847

173
353
59
585

1,537
672
0
2,209

1,129
3,094
188
4,411

2,713
1,276
24
4,013

771
1,102
42
1,915

473
2,517
181
3,171

292
512
25
829

657
1,078
36
1,771

2,184
2,545
364
5,093

501
1,346
3
1,850

3,123
72,231
4,208
79,562

89
6,687
123
6,899

416
7,967
44
8,427

233
5,882
637
6,752

272
5,385
69
5,726

144
5,451
204
5,799

129
2,485
35
2,649

65
1,788
115
1,968

52
1,789
70
1,911

1,564
29,527
2,905
33,996

159
5,270
6
5,435

26,994
563,847
16,936
607,777

2,897
19,046
409
22,352

11,644
59,933
387
71,964

3,159
91,034
6,834
101,027

2,979
210,390
3,347
216,716

1,272
61,367
1,633
64,272

1,429
56,922
303
58,654

606
15,029
695
16,330

279
4,972
130
5,381

2,336
40,492
3,191
46,019

393
4,662
7
5,062

4,117
15,069
667
19,853

441
149
13
603

565
292
2
859

326
349
70
745

889
601
73
1,563

351
363
21
735

338
521
4
863

74
189
8
271

47
303
18
368

865
11,263
455
12,583

221
1,039
3
1,263

558,401
876,498
45,806
1,480,705

17,147
48,534
3,276
68,957

50,471
66,634
378
117,483

30,369
101,772
19,053
151,194

99,503
200,051
3,531
303,085

26,210
123,749
2,318
152,277

127,790
74,301
339
202,430

21,064
49,144
1,315
71,523

21,165
42,913
1,221
65,299

150,625
106,931
14,336
271,892

14,057
62,469
39
76,565

53,054
37,502
4,700
95,256

6,298
3,819
220
10,337

13,880
2,986
92
16,958

4,673
1,940
357
6,970

5,600
4,475
1,243
11,318

3,174
6,982
294
10,450

3,423
3,970
56
7,449

1,190
1,483
183
2,856

496
957
67
1,520

13,673
7,893
2,183
23,749

647
2,997
5
3,649

270,552
68,827
42,173
381,552

8,196
2,495
1,916
12,607

42,007
8,917
818
51,742

29,480
11,889
6,732
48,101

13,628
6,175
4,020
23,823

14,342
4,080
1,903
20,325

2,546
753
6,590
9,889

2,009
837
452
3,298

7,302
1,750
854
9,906

139,815
25,903
18,849
184,567

11,227
6,028
39
17,294

926,671
1,648,469
115,412
2,690,552

35,241
81,083
6,016
122,340

120,520
147,401
1,721
269,642

69,369
215,960
33,871
319,200

125,584
428,353
12,307
566,244

46,264
203,094
6,415
255,773

136,128
141,469
7,508
285,105

25,300
68,982
2,793
97,075

29,998
53,762
2,396
86,156

311,062
224,554
42,283
577,899

27,205
83,811
102
111,118

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 12. Distribution of female family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 2)
Race and Ethnicity
American Indian or Alaska Native
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Asian
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Black or African American
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
White
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
More Than One Race
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Race Unknown or Not Reported
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
All Races
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

All Regions

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

1%
0%†
0%
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
2%

0%†
3%
0%†
3%

0%†
5%
0%†
6%

0%†
3%
0%†
3%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
5%
1%
6%

0%†
5%
0%†
5%

2%
16%
0%†
18%

4%
22%
0%†
27%

0%†
24%
1%
25%

1%
20%
0%†
21%

0%†
6%
0%†
6%

0%†
7%
1%
8%

0%†
4%
0%†
5%

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

1%
21%
1%
23%
0%†
1%
0%†
1%
21%
33%
2%
55%
2%
1%
0%†
4%

14%
40%
3%
56%
5%
3%
0%†
8%

10%
3%
2%
14%

7%
2%
2%
10%

34%
61%
4%
100%

29%
66%
5%
100%

Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.

19

† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Region I

19%
25%
0%†
44%
5%
1%
0%†
6%
16%
3%
0%†
19%
45%
55%
1%
100%

1%
29%
2%
32%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
10%
32%
6%
47%
1%
1%
0%†
2%

1%
37%
1%
38%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
18%
35%
1%
54%

10%
48%
1%
60%

45%
26%
0%†
71%

1%
15%
1%
17%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
22%
51%
1%
74%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

1%
3%
0%†
4%

1%
1%
0%†
3%

1%
2%
0%†
3%

9%
4%
2%
15%

2%
1%
1%
4%

6%
2%
1%
8%

1%
0%†
2%
3%

2%
1%
0%†
3%

22%
68%
11%
100%

22%
76%
2%
100%

18%
79%
3%
100%

48%
50%
3%
100%

26%
71%
3%
100%

25%
50%
1%
76%
1%
1%
0%†
2%

26%
19%
2%
47%
2%
1%
0%†
4%

13%
56%
0%†
69%
1%
3%
0%†
3%

8%
2%
1%
11%

24%
4%
3%
32%

10%
5%
0%†
16%

35%
62%
3%
100%

54%
39%
7%
100%

24%
75%
0%†
100%

20

Exhibit 13. Number of male family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 3)
Race and Ethnicity
American Indian or Alaska Native
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

Region I

Region II

1,283
1,981
262
3,526

31
79
21
131

169
105
3
277

84
502
62
648

217
148
3
368

92
227
23
342

68
128
16
212

59
102
11
172

117
176
12
305

394
393
109
896

52
121
2
175

415
8,357
711
9,483

8
575
34
617

63
1,023
5
1,091

26
703
71
800

22
944
36
1,002

11
751
36
798

22
314
6
342

33
133
10
176

7
254
14
275

216
3,408
496
4,120

7
252
3
262

5,195
115,514
4,339
125,048

720
4,221
163
5,104

1,601
9,777
167
11,545

929
22,263
1,477
24,669

375
38,940
691
40,006

212
11,764
413
12,389

242
12,635
128
13,005

472
3,728
159
4,359

78
2,180
137
2,395

514
9,362
1,004
10,880

52
644
0
696

663
1,709
102
2,474

149
32
3
184

98
51
1
150

75
58
6
139

84
78
1
163

22
49
5
76

52
30
2
84

46
24
3
73

22
57
7
86

106
1,236
74
1,416

9
94
0
103

60,097
127,562
9,260
196,919

2,674
9,827
976
13,477

4,903
9,309
94
14,306

4,335
12,584
2,450
19,369

9,174
26,503
560
36,237

2,642
18,482
524
21,648

12,145
8,937
65
21,147

1,379
5,972
321
7,672

3,280
9,862
472
13,614

18,858
20,237
3,785
42,880

707
5,849
13
6,569

More Than One Race
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

8,761
5,228
1,127
15,116

879
453
73
1,405

2,565
419
15
2,999

1,190
355
73
1,618

977
762
302
2,041

400
949
55
1,404

490
374
4
868

135
197
40
372

102
198
13
313

1,917
1,305
552
3,774

106
216
0
322

Race Unknown or Not Reported
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

33,716
11,408
7,424
52,548

1,422
569
488
2,479

6,340
1,549
132
8,021

4,636
2,199
1,221
8,056

1,353
565
620
2,538

1,384
657
637
2,678

322
135
175
632

283
100
81
464

1,054
402
214
1,670

15,996
4,433
3,853
24,282

926
799
3
1,728

110,130
271,759
23,225
405,114

5,883
15,756
1,758
23,397

15,739
22,233
417
38,389

11,275
38,664
5,360
55,299

12,202
67,940
2,213
82,355

4,763
32,879
1,693
39,335

13,341
22,553
396
36,290

2,407
10,256
625
13,288

4,660
13,129
869
18,658

38,001
40,374
9,873
88,248

1,859
7,975
21
9,855

Asian
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Black or African American
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
White
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal

All Races
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

All Regions

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 14. Distribution of male family planning users, by race, ethnicity, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 3)
Race and Ethnicity
American Indian or Alaska Native
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Asian
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Black or African American
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
White
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
More Than One Race
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
Race Unknown or Not Reported
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Subtotal
All Races
Hispanic or Latino
Not Hispanic or Latino
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

All Regions

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

0%†
0%†
0%†
1%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
2%
0%†
3%

0%†
3%
0%†
3%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
2%
0%†
2%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
1%
0%†
1%

0%†
4%
1%
5%

0%†
3%
0%†
3%

1%
29%
1%
31%
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
15%
31%
2%
49%
2%
1%
0%†
4%

3%
18%
1%
22%
1%
0%†
0%†
1%
11%
42%
4%
58%
4%
2%
0%†
6%

8%
3%
2%
13%

6%
2%
2%
11%

27%
67%
6%
100%

25%
67%
8%
100%

Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Region I

4%
25%
0%†
30%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
13%
24%
0%†
37%
7%
1%
0%†
8%
17%
4%
0%†
21%
41%
58%
1%
100%

2%
40%
3%
45%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
8%
23%
4%
35%
2%
1%
0%†
3%

0%†
47%
1%
49%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
11%
32%
1%
44%

1%
30%
1%
31%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
7%
47%
1%
55%

1%
35%
0%†
36%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
33%
25%
0%†
58%

4%
28%
1%
33%
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
10%
45%
2%
58%

0%†
12%
1%
13%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
18%
53%
3%
73%

1%
11%
1%
12%
0%†
1%
0%†
2%

1%
7%
0%
7%
0%†
1%
0%
1%

21%
23%
4%
49%

7%
59%
0%†
67%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

1%
2%
0%†
4%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

1%
1%
0%†
3%

1%
1%
0%†
2%

2%
1%
1%
4%

1%
2%
0%
3%

8%
4%
2%
15%

2%
1%
1%
3%

4%
2%
2%
7%

1%
0%†
0%†
2%

2%
1%
1%
3%

6%
2%
1%
9%

18%
5%
4%
28%

9%
8%
0%†
18%

20%
70%
10%
100%

15%
82%
3%
100%

12%
84%
4%
100%

18%
77%
5%
100%

25%
70%
5%
100%

43%
46%
11%
100%

19%
81%
0%†
100%

37%
62%
1%
100%

21

Selected Guidance for Reporting User Social and Economic Profile Data in FPAR Tables 4 through 6
In FPAR Table 4, grantees report the unduplicated number
of users by income level as a percentage of the HHS
Poverty Guidelines. Grantees are required to collect family
income data from all users to determine charges based on
the schedule of discounts.2,3 In determining a user’s family
income, agencies should refer to the poverty guidelines
updated periodically in the Federal Register by HHS under
the authority of 42 USC 9902(2).10
In FPAR Table 5, grantees report the unduplicated number
of users based on whether they have principal health
insurance covering primary medical care.
Principal health insurance covering primary medical
care refers to public and private health insurance plans that
provide a broad set of primary medical care benefits to
enrolled individuals. Grantees report the most current health
insurance coverage information available for the client even
though he or she may not have used this health insurance to
pay for family planning services received during his or her
last encounter. For individuals who have coverage under
more than one health plan, principal insurance is defined
as the insurance plan that the agency would bill first
(i.e., primary) if a claim were to be filed.
Categories of principal health insurance covering primary
medical care include the following:
■

Public Health Insurance—Refers to federal, state, or
local government health insurance programs that provide
a broad set of primary medical care benefits for eligible
individuals. Examples of such programs include Medicaid
(both regular and managed care), Medicare, the
Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and other
state or local government programs that provide a broad
set of benefits. Also included are public-paid or
public-subsidized private insurance programs.

■

Private Health Insurance—Refers to health insurance
coverage through an employer, union, or direct purchase
that provides a broad set of primary medical care benefits
for the enrolled individual (beneficiary or dependent).
Private insurance includes insurance purchased for public
employees or retirees or military personnel and their
dependents (e.g., TRICARE or CHAMPVA).

■

Uninsured—Refers to users who do not have a public or
private health insurance plan that covers broad, primary
medical care benefits. Clients whose services are
subsidized through state or local indigent care programs
or clients insured through the Indian Health Service who
obtain care in a nonparticipating facility are considered
uninsured.

In FPAR Table 6, grantees report the unduplicated number
of family planning users with limited English proficiency.
Limited English proficient (LEP) users are those family
planning users who do not speak English as their primary
language and who have a limited ability to read, write,
speak, or understand English. Because of their limited
English proficiency, LEP users derive little benefit from
Title X services and information provided in English. LEP
users include those who require language assistance
services (interpretation or translation) to optimize their use of
Title X services, those who received Title X services from
bilingual staff in the user’s preferred non-English language,
those who were assisted by a competent agency or
contracted interpreter, or those who opted to use a family
member or friend as an interpreter after refusing the
provider’s offer of free language assistance services. Unless
they are also LEP, do not include users who are visually or
hearing impaired or have other disabilities.

Note: For detailed reporting guidance, please refer to the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016), pp. 21–23.5

22

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC PROFILE
Users by Income Level (Exhibit 15)
Federal regulations2,3 require Title X-funded providers to give priority in the delivery of care
to persons from low-income families. These regulations specify that individuals with family
incomes at or below the HHS poverty guideline (poverty) for 2019 ($25,750 for a family of
four in the 48 contiguous states and the District of Columbia)10 receive services at no charge
unless a third party (government or private) is authorized or obligated to pay for these
services. For individuals with incomes between 101% and 250% of the poverty guideline,
Title X-funded agencies are required to charge for services using a sliding fee scale based on
family size and income. For unemancipated minors seeking confidential services, the
assessment of income level is based on their own rather than their family’s income, on the
condition that the Title X provider has documented taking specific actions to encourage the
minor to involve a parent or guardian in his or her decision to seek family planning services.3
In 2019, 88% (2.7 million) of users had family incomes that qualified them for either
no-charge (<101% of poverty) or subsidized (101% to 250% of poverty) services.
Sixty-four percent (2.0 million) of users with family incomes at or below 100% of poverty
qualified for no-charge services, while 24% (741,641) with family incomes between 101%
and 250% of poverty qualified for subsidized care. Seven percent (226,957) of users had
incomes over 250% of poverty, and family income data were unknown or not reported for 5%
(158,192) of users (Exhibit 15).

▪ By region, 82% to 94% of users had family incomes qualifying them for either no-charge
(51% to 75% of users) or subsidized (19% to 33% of users) services (Exhibit 15).

▪ By state, 33% to 100% of users had family incomes qualifying them for no-charge

services, and 0% to 45% had incomes qualifying them for subsidized care (Exhibit B–2).

See Exhibits A–7a and A–7b for trends (2009 through 2019) in the distribution of family
planning users by income level.

Users by Insurance Coverage Status (Exhibit 16)
Title X regulations2,3 require Title X-funded agencies to bill all third parties authorized or
legally obligated to pay for services and to make reasonable efforts to collect charges without
jeopardizing client confidentiality. On the FPAR, grantees report the health insurance
coverage status for a client even though an insured client may not have used their health
insurance to pay for services received during their last family planning encounter. Users
whose family planning care was paid by a Medicaid family planning eligibility expansion but
who had no other public or private health insurance plan covering broad primary medical care
benefits are considered uninsured, as are users with single-service plans (e.g., vision or
dental) or those with coverage through the Indian Health Service (IHS) who received care in
non-IHS facilities.
In 2019, 58% (1.8 million) of family planning users had either public (38%, 1.2 million) or
private (20%, 607,961) insurance covering broad primary medical care benefits; 41%

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

23

(1.3 million) were uninsured. Health insurance coverage status was unknown or not reported
for 1% (45,684) of users (Exhibit 16).

▪ By region, 20% to 49% of family planning users had public coverage, 8% to 34% had
private coverage, and 18% to 58% were uninsured (Exhibit 16).

▪ By state, there was wide variation in the percentage of users who were publicly insured

(0% to 95%), privately insured (0% to 53%), and uninsured (2% to 100%) (Exhibit B–3a).

See Exhibits A–8a and A–8b for trends (2009 through 2019) in the distribution of family
planning users by primary health insurance status.
See Exhibit B–3b for 2019 state-level information on the distribution of family planning
users by primary health insurance status according to states’ Medicaid expansion status.

Users by Limited English Proficiency Status (Exhibit 17)
As recipients of HHS funding, Title X grantees and subrecipients, including those operating
in U.S. territories and Freely Associated States where English is an official language, are
required to ensure that limited English proficient (LEP) individuals have meaningful access to
the health and social services they provide.13
In 2019, 15% (461,829) of family planning users were LEP. By region, the percentage of
users who were LEP ranged from 7% to 23% (Exhibit 17). The percentage of family planning
users who were LEP in 2009 was 14% compared with 15% in 2019. During this period, the
number of LEP users decreased 37%, from 737,044 (2009) to 461,829 (2019) (not shown).

24

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 15. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by income level and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 4)
Income Levela

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

Under 101%

1,968,876

73,726

192,611

221,068

412,417

172,510

240,958

63,682

67,596

458,171

66,137

101% to 150%

426,239

24,736

50,865

51,263

76,952

45,398

39,527

15,446

13,003

89,191

19,858

151% to 200%

211,586

13,602

21,816

23,043

36,789

24,632

16,345

8,529

8,298

45,832

12,700

201% to 250%

103,816

7,886

13,274

14,888

18,157

13,926

6,598

4,826

5,199

11,682

7,380

Over 250%

226,957

17,715

26,325

25,939

59,896

29,964

7,059

13,128

10,158

23,569

13,204

Unknown/not reported

158,192

8,072

3,140

38,298

44,388

8,678

10,908

4,752

560

37,702

1,694

3,095,666

145,737

308,031

374,499

648,599

295,108

321,395

110,363

104,814

666,147

120,973

Under 101%

64%

51%

63%

59%

64%

58%

75%

58%

64%

69%

55%

101% to 150%

14%

17%

17%

14%

12%

15%

12%

14%

12%

13%

16%

151% to 200%

7%

9%

7%

6%

6%

8%

5%

8%

8%

7%

10%

201% to 250%

3%

5%

4%

4%

3%

5%

2%

4%

5%

2%

6%

Over 250%

7%

12%

9%

7%

9%

10%

2%

12%

10%

4%

11%

Unknown/not reported

5%

6%

1%

10%

7%

3%

3%

4%

1%

6%

1%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Total All Users

Total All Users

Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
a
Title X-funded agencies calculate and report user family income as a percentage of poverty based on guidelines issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS). Each year, HHS announces updates to its poverty guidelines in the Federal Register and on the HHS Website at https://aspe.hhs.gov/2019-poverty-guidelines.

25

26

Exhibit 16. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by principal health insurance coverage status and region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 5)
Insurance Status

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

Public health insurance

1,186,684

69,408

150,662

164,250

228,228

108,990

86,591

22,438

24,207

288,486

43,424

607,961

49,257

64,317

85,217

146,655

72,375

45,329

29,603

27,131

53,997

34,080

1,255,337

26,019

90,193

106,599

269,043

109,497

187,823

57,522

52,366

314,364

41,911

45,684

1,053

2,859

18,433

4,673

4,246

1,652

800

1,110

9,300

1,558

3,095,666

145,737

308,031

374,499

648,599

295,108

321,395

110,363

104,814

666,147

120,973

Public health insurance

38%

48%

49%

44%

35%

37%

27%

20%

23%

43%

36%

Private health insurance

20%

34%

21%

23%

23%

25%

14%

27%

26%

8%

28%

Uninsured

41%

18%

29%

28%

41%

37%

58%

52%

50%

47%

35%

1%

1%

1%

5%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Private health insurance
Uninsured
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 17. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by limited English proficiency (LEP) status and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 6)
LEP Status

Region I

Region IIa

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

461,829

22,197

71,575

52,691

73,525

19,395

68,260

12,646

14,032

117,149

10,359

2,583,016

123,515

236,384

304,856

545,553

272,386

253,020

97,118

90,734

548,849

110,601

50,821

25

72

16,952

29,521

3,327

115

599

48

149

13

3,095,666

145,737

308,031

374,499

648,599

295,108

321,395

110,363

104,814

666,147

120,973

LEP

15%

15%

23%

14%

11%

7%

21%

11%

13%

18%

9%

Not LEP

83%

85%

77%

81%

84%

92%

79%

88%

87%

82%

91%

2%

0%†

0%†

5%

5%

1%

0%†

1%

0%†

0%†

0%†

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

LEP
Not LEP
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

All Regions

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IXb

Region X

LEP=limited English proficient.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
a
Includes family planning users served by grantees in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
b
Includes family planning users served by grantees in American Samoa, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Guam, Republic of the
Marshall Islands, and Republic of Palau.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

27

Selected Guidance for Reporting Primary Contraceptive Method Use in FPAR Tables 7 and 8
In FPAR Tables 7 and 8, grantees report the unduplicated
number of female (Table 7) and male (Table 8) family
planning users according to their primary method of family
planning and age group (as of June 30 of the reporting
period).

■

Lactational Amenorrhea Method (LAM)—Refers to the
proactive application of exclusive breastfeeding—meaning
full (i.e., no other liquid or solid given to infant) or nearly
full (i.e., infrequent supplementation in small amounts, but
not by bottle)—during the first 6 months after delivery14

A user’s primary method of family planning is the
contraceptive method—adopted or continued—at the time
of exit from the user’s last encounter in the reporting
period. If the user reports that he or she is using more than
one family planning method, the grantee reports the most
effective one as the primary method.

■

Abstinence—Refers to refraining from oral, vaginal, and
anal intercourse15 and includes users who are not
currently sexually active and therefore not using
contraception

■

Withdrawal and Other Methods—Refers to the use of
withdrawal or other method to prevent pregnancy that is
not listed in Table 7 or 8

■

Vasectomy—Refers to conventional incisional or
no-scalpel vasectomy performed on a male user or the
male partner of a female user in the current or any
previous reporting period

■

Male condom—Used with or without spermicidal foam or
film by a male user or the male partner of a female user

■

Rely on Female Method(s)—Male family planning users
who rely on female partners’ family planning methods as
their primary method are reported on this row. “Female
methods” include female sterilization, IUD/IUS, hormonal
implants, 1- and 3-month hormonal injections, oral
contraceptives, the contraceptive patch, the vaginal ring,
cervical cap or diaphragms, the contraceptive sponge,
female condoms, LAM, and spermicides.

■

Method Unknown or Not Reported—Users whose
primary method at exit from the last encounter is unknown
or not reported (i.e., missing from the client record)

The categories for reporting the primary method in Table 7
(female users) and Table 8 (male users) vary and include:
■

Female Sterilization—Refers to a contraceptive surgical
[tubal ligation] or nonsurgical [implant] procedure
performed on a female user in the current or any previous
reporting period

■

Intrauterine Device or System (IUD/IUS)—Refers to
long-term hormonal or other type of IUD or IUS

■

Hormonal Implant—Refers to the long-term, subdermal
implant

■

1- or 3-Month Hormonal Injection—Refers to 1- or
3-month injectable hormonal contraception

■

Oral Contraceptive—Refers to combination and
progestin-only (“mini-pills”) formulations

■

Contraceptive Patch

■

Hormonal Vaginal Ring

■

Cervical Cap or Diaphragm—Used with or without
spermicidal jelly or cream

Reasons for not using a method in both tables are:

■

Contraceptive Sponge

■

■

Female Condom—Used with or without spermicidal foam
or film

■

Spermicide—Refers to spermicidal jelly, cream, foam, or
film used alone, i.e., not in conjunction with another
method of contraception

[Partner] Pregnant or Seeking Pregnancy—Female
(Table 7) or male (Table 8) users who are not using any
method to avoid pregnancy because they (female users)
or their female partners (male users) are either pregnant
or seeking pregnancy.

■

No Method–Other Reason—Female (Table 7) or male
(Table 8) users who are not using any method to avoid
pregnancy for reasons that include: either partner is sterile
without having been sterilized surgically, either partner
has had a noncontraceptive surgical procedure that has
rendered him or her unable to conceive or impregnate, or
the user has a sexual partner of the same sex.

■

Fertility Awareness Method (FAM)—Refers to family
planning methods, e.g., Standard Days®, Calendar
Rhythm, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal,
that rely on identifying the fertile days in each menstrual
cycle when intercourse is most likely to result in a
pregnancy

Note: For detailed reporting guidance, please refer to the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016), pp. 27–30.5

28

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

5 Contraceptive Use
Federal regulations2,3 specify that Title X projects are required to provide a broad range of
acceptable and effective family planning methods (including contraceptives and natural
family planning or other fertility awareness-based methods [FAMs]) and services (including
infertility services, information about or referrals for adoption, and services for adolescents).
Individual service sites may offer a single or limited number of methods as long as the project
as a whole offers a broad range.2 In addition to offering a full range of methods for clients to
consider, the Quality Family Planning (QFP) Recommendations16 advise providers to identify
methods that are safe for the client, provide counseling to help the client choose a method and
use it correctly and consistently, conduct any physical assessments warranted by the selected
method, and provide the method on site (preferable) or by referral. The QFP
Recommendations also note that providers should ensure that services for adolescent clients
are provided in a “youth-friendly” way.

FEMALE CONTRACEPTIVE USE (EXHIBITS 18 THROUGH 21)
In 2019, 77% (2.1 million) of all female users adopted or continued use of a most,
moderately, or less effective contraceptive method (see text box) at their last encounter in the
reporting period. Eight percent (207,880) of females exited the encounter with no method
because they were pregnant or seeking pregnancy, and another 6% (167,834) exited with no
method for other reasons. Three percent (90,729) of female users reported that they were
abstinent, and the type of primary method used was unknown or not reported for the
remaining 5% (146,367) (Exhibits 18 and 19).

▪

Contraceptive Methods by Level of
By level of effectiveness in preventing
Effectiveness in Preventing Pregnancy18
pregnancy, 19% of all female users relied
■ Most effective: vasectomy, female
on a most effective method, 40% used a
sterilization, implant, or intrauterine
moderately effective method, and 18%
device (IUD)
used a less effective method
■ Moderately effective: injectable
(Exhibits 18 and 19). The grouping of
contraception, vaginal ring, contraceptive
methods by level of effectiveness aligns
patch, pills, diaphragm, or cervical cap
with the OPA-developed and National
■ Least effective: male condom, female
Quality Forum-endorsed performance
condom, sponge, withdrawal, a FAM or
measures for contraceptive care.17 See
lactational amenorrhea method (LAM), or
spermicide used alone
Table 7 comments in the Field and
Methodological Notes (Appendix C) for
more information about the performance measures17 and method-effectiveness
categories.18

▪

By type of method, the contraceptive pill was used by 22% of all female users, followed
by injectable contraception (15%), male condoms (14%), IUDs (9%), hormonal implants

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

29

(7%), female sterilization (3%), the vaginal ring (2%), the contraceptive patch (1%), and
a FAM or LAM (1%). Three percent of female users reported using withdrawal or other
methods not listed in FPAR Table 7, and less than 0.5% of female users relied on each of
the following methods: vasectomy, female condom, spermicide (used alone), cervical cap
or diaphragm, and the contraceptive sponge (Exhibits 18 and 19).

▪

By age group, from 50% (under 15) to 82% (18 to 19) of female users adopted or
continued use of a most, moderately, or less effective method (Exhibits 18 and 19).
Nonuse of contraception because of pregnancy or the desire for pregnancy ranged from
6% to 10% among females 18 to 39 and was 4% or less among female users in the
younger and older age groups. The three leading methods by age group were as follows:
-

Females under 18: Pills, injectables, and implants

-

Females 18 to 44: Pills and either injectables or male condoms

-

Females over 44: Female sterilization, male condoms, and pills

▪ By region, from 68% to 87% of female users exited the encounter with a most, moderately,
or less effective contraceptive method. Exhibits 20 and 21 present additional information
on contraceptive method mix for female users in each region.

▪ By state, there was wide variation in the percentage of female users at risk of unintended

pregnancy who relied on most effective (0% to 42%), moderately effective (17% to 72%),
or less effective (1% to 44%) contraceptive methods (Exhibit B–4). Female users at risk of
unintended pregnancy were defined as those who were not pregnant, not seeking
pregnancy, and not abstinent.

Trends in Female Primary Contraceptive Method Use
From 2009 through 2019, the percentage of all female users relying on most, moderately, or
less effective methods ranged from 77% to 84%. Between 13% and 14% used no method
because they were either pregnant, seeking pregnancy, or for other reasons, and 1% to 3%
were abstinent (Exhibits A–9a, A–9b, and A–9c).
Use of most effective methods: Among all female users, the percentage relying on the most
effective methods increased from 7% (2009) to 19% (2019) (Exhibits A–9a, A–9b, and A–9c).
Numerically, the number of female users relying on the most effective methods, especially
IUDs and implants, increased 50%, from 346,046 (2009) to 517,828 (2019).
Use of moderately effective methods: The percentage of all female users relying on
moderately effective methods decreased from 54% (2009) to 40% (2019)
(Exhibits A–9a, A–9b, and A–9c). Numerically, the number of female users relying on
moderately effective methods decreased 59%, from 2.6 million (2009) to 1.1 million (2019).
During all years in this period, the pill was the leading method among female users.
Use of less effective methods: The percentage of all female users relying on less effective
methods was 18% in both 2009 and 2019 (Exhibits A–9a, A–9b, and A–9c). Across the
different methods in this category, there were small or no changes in the percentage of female
users who relied on each type of method. Females relying on male condoms for pregnancy

30

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

prevention accounted for about 8 of every 10 female users in this category in both 2009
(84%) and 2019 (80%).

MALE CONTRACEPTIVE USE (EXHIBITS 22 THROUGH 25)
In 2019, grantees reported that 69% (278,056) of all male users adopted or continued use of a
most, moderately, or less effective primary method at their last encounter in the reporting
period. Thirteen percent (50,766) of males used no primary method, either because their
partners were pregnant or seeking pregnancy (1%) or for other reasons (11%), and another
9% (35,183) reported that they were abstinent. The type of primary contraceptive method
used was unknown or not reported for 10% (41,109) of male users (Exhibits 22 and 23).

▪

By type of method, over one-half (56%) of all male users relied on male condoms,
followed by reliance on a female method (8%), withdrawal (3%), a FAM or LAM (1%),
or vasectomy (1%) (Exhibits 22 and 23).

▪

By age group, from 14% (under 15) to 79% (20 to 24) of male users relied on a most,
moderately, or less effective method. (Exhibits 22 and 23). Nonuse of contraception
because a partner was pregnant or seeking pregnancy was less than 0.5% among males
under 15 and 1% to 2% among males 15 or over. Among males, the two leading methods
by age group were as follows:

▪

-

Males under 18: Male condoms and withdrawal or other methods not listed on
FPAR Table 8

-

Males 18 and over: Male condoms and reliance on a female method

By region, the percentage of males who exited the encounter with a most, moderately, or
less effective method ranged from 49% to 83%. Exhibits 24 and 25 present additional
information on contraceptive method mix for male users in each region.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

31

32

Exhibit 18. Number of female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and age: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7)
Primary Method

All Age
Groups

Under 15
Years

15 to 17
Years

18 to 19
Years

20 to 24
Years

25 to 29
Years

30 to 34
Years

35 to 39
Years

40 to 44
Years

Over 44
Years

82,472
237,073
190,615
398,894a
598,304
32,714
46,021
877
377
3,159
995
17,370
90,729
75,253

0
261
2,507
5,416a
5,613
379
134
2
10
17
2
102
10,911
485

0
6,032
19,608
42,416a
50,361
3,034
1,837
27
27
151
40
461
14,701
2,857

0
14,090
24,364
47,043a
71,585
3,933
3,626
42
22
200
74
864
7,312
4,793

815
52,600
54,768
94,061a
171,203
9,270
12,264
124
50
600
228
3,236
12,849
15,667

6,061
55,578
40,752
74,387a
123,173
7,125
12,940
194
70
555
196
3,789
11,075
15,233

12,996
44,914
25,107
56,185a
80,191
4,754
8,912
187
75
489
171
3,234
9,049
12,103

17,776
32,221
14,360
40,642a
49,638
2,596
4,065
151
56
419
122
2,394
7,548
8,994

17,024
19,634
6,395
23,916a
28,169
1,192
1,609
86
40
348
92
1,604
6,061
6,223

27,800
11,743
2,754
14,828a
18,371
431
634
64
27
380
70
1,686
11,223
8,898

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Female sterilization
Intrauterine device
Hormonal implant
Hormonal injection
Oral contraceptive
Contraceptive patch
Vaginal ring
Cervical cap or diaphragm
Contraceptive sponge
Female condom
Spermicide (used alone)
FAM or LAMb
Abstinencec
Withdrawal or other methodd
Rely on Male Method
Vasectomy
Male condom
No Method
Pregnant/seeking pregnancy
Other reason
Method Unknown
Total Female Users

7,668
385,950

0
2,089

3
19,188

44
34,052

289
96,917

724
83,476

1,393
58,203

1,891
40,087

1,643
27,069

1,681
24,869

207,880
167,834
146,367
2,690,552

364
1,517
4,212
34,021

5,525
6,306
8,036
180,610

15,642
10,723
10,093
248,502

56,578
32,711
28,925
643,155

57,495
32,688
27,473
552,984

40,312
26,193
20,936
405,404

22,497
20,192
16,136
281,785

7,615
15,378
11,875
175,973

1,852
22,126
18,681
168,118

Using Most, Moderately, or
Less Effective Methode

2,077,742

17,017

146,042

204,732

512,092

424,253

308,914

215,412

135,044

114,236

Most effectivee
Moderately effectivee
Less effectivee
Abstinence
Not Using a Method
Method Unknown

517,828
1,076,810
483,104
90,729
375,714
146,367

2,768
11,544
2,705
10,911
1,881
4,212

25,643
97,675
22,724
14,701
11,831
8,036

38,498
126,229
40,005
7,312
26,365
10,093

108,472
286,922
116,698
12,849
89,289
28,925

103,115
217,819
103,319
11,075
90,183
27,473

84,410
150,229
74,275
9,049
66,505
20,936

66,248
97,092
52,072
7,548
42,689
16,136

44,696
54,972
35,376
6,061
22,993
11,875

43,978
34,328
35,930
11,223
23,978
18,681

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
a
Includes both 3-month and 1-month hormonal injection users.
b
FAMs include Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
c
User refrained from oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse.
d
Includes withdrawal or any other method not listed in FPAR Table 7.
e
Most effective methods include vasectomy, female sterilization, implant, and intrauterine device. Moderately effective methods include hormonal methods (injection, pill, patch,
and ring), diaphragm with spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male and female condoms, withdrawal, sponge, spermicide (used alone),
FAM or LAM, and other methods not listed in Table 7. See Table 7 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 19. Distribution of female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and age: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7)
Primary Method
Female sterilization
Intrauterine device
Hormonal implant
Hormonal injection
Oral contraceptive
Contraceptive patch
Vaginal ring
Cervical cap or diaphragm
Contraceptive sponge
Female condom
Spermicide (used alone)
FAM or LAMb
Abstinencec
Withdrawal or other methodd
Rely on Male Method
Vasectomy
Male condom
No Method
Pregnant/seeking pregnancy
Other reason
Method Unknown
Total Female Users
Using Most, Moderately, or
Less Effective Methode

All Age
Groups

Under 15
Years

15 to 17
Years

18 to 19
Years

20 to 24
Years

25 to 29
Years

30 to 34
Years

35 to 39
Years

40 to 44
Years

Over 44
Years

3%
9%
7%
15%a
22%
1%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
3%
3%

0%
1%
7%
16%a
16%
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
32%
1%

0%
3%
11%
23%a
28%
2%
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
8%
2%

0%
6%
10%
19%a
29%
2%
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
3%
2%

0%†
8%
9%
15%a
27%
1%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
2%
2%

1%
10%
7%
13%a
22%
1%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
2%
3%

3%
11%
6%
14%a
20%
1%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
2%
3%

6%
11%
5%
14%a
18%
1%
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
3%
3%

10%
11%
4%
14%a
16%
1%
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
3%
4%

17%
7%
2%
9%a
11%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
7%
5%

0%†
14%

0%
6%

0%†
11%

0%†
14%

0%†
15%

0%†
15%

0%†
14%

1%
14%

1%
15%

1%
15%

8%
6%
5%
100%

1%
4%
12%
100%

3%
3%
4%
100%

6%
4%
4%
100%

9%
5%
4%
100%

10%
6%
5%
100%

10%
6%
5%
100%

8%
7%
6%
100%

4%
9%
7%
100%

1%
13%
11%
100%

77%

50%

81%

82%

80%

77%

76%

76%

77%

68%

33

Most effectivee
19%
8%
14%
15%
17%
19%
21%
24%
25%
26%
Moderately effectivee
40%
34%
54%
51%
45%
39%
37%
34%
31%
20%
Less effectivee
18%
8%
13%
16%
18%
19%
18%
18%
20%
21%
Abstinence
3%
32%
8%
3%
2%
2%
2%
3%
3%
7%
Not Using a Method
14%
6%
7%
11%
14%
16%
16%
15%
13%
14%
Method Unknown
5%
12%
4%
4%
4%
5%
5%
6%
7%
11%
FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
a
Includes both 3-month and 1-month hormonal injection users.
b
FAMs include Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
c
User refrained from oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse.
d
Includes withdrawal or any other method not listed in FPAR Table 7.
e
Most effective methods include vasectomy, female sterilization, implant, and intrauterine device. Moderately effective methods include hormonal methods (injection, pill, patch,
and ring), diaphragm with spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male and female condoms, withdrawal, sponge, spermicide (used alone),
FAM or LAM, and other methods not listed in Table 7. See Table 7 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

34

Exhibit 20. Number of female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7)
Primary Method

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

Female sterilization

82,472

5,183

5,284

10,954

18,479

6,816

15,262

4,622

1,304

13,175

1,393

Intrauterine device

237,073

15,699

28,576

22,311

28,106

23,260

21,057

10,332

13,988

59,718

14,026

Hormonal implant

190,615

9,897

15,459

22,062

32,540

16,323

22,512

7,065

8,942

46,454

9,361

Hormonal injection

398,894a

14,227a

32,204

43,560a

103,500a

43,065

46,911a

19,033a

13,774a

65,002a

17,618

Oral contraceptive

598,304

26,105

64,633

63,635

123,952

64,027

55,737

21,714

22,730

125,063

Contraceptive patch

32,714

1,482

5,012

2,405

4,143

3,389

2,821

698

612

9,793

2,359

Vaginal ring

46,021

2,183

5,399

4,975

6,054

5,701

3,488

1,336

2,778

10,505

3,602

Cervical cap or diaphragm

877

72

72

93

72

117

79

17

28

215

112

Contraceptive sponge

377

17

15

55

16

6

16

1

5

238

8

3,159

50

152

618

577

151

484

64

51

986

26

Female condom
Spermicide (used alone)
FAM or LAMb

30,708

995

22

36

95

206

33

475

15

11

77

25

17,370

450

920

940

7,379

420

2,292

304

236

4,096

333

Abstinencec

90,729

7,333

8,026

13,287

22,288

5,370

11,205

2,599

1,968

15,616

3,037

Withdrawal or other methodd
Rely on Male Method
Vasectomy

75,253

2,296

6,510

4,963

25,244

4,366

14,307

1,678

1,756

9,161

4,972

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Male condom
No Method
Pregnant/seeking pregnancy

7,668

561

586

1,175

1,250

530

990

349

379

1,288

560

385,950

15,653

51,878

37,871

50,651

34,592

36,525

11,656

8,065

129,014

10,045

207,880

8,183

22,586

17,817

57,294

17,927

27,195

9,110

5,515

36,811

5,442

Other reason

167,834

7,609

16,432

22,381

38,704

16,993

21,576

4,345

3,914

28,436

7,444

Method Unknown

146,367

5,318

5,862

50,003

45,789

12,687

2,173

2,137

100

22,251

47

2,690,552

122,340

269,642

319,200

566,244

255,773

285,105

97,075

86,156

577,899

111,118

Most effectivee

2,077,742
517,828

93,897
31,340

216,736
49,905

215,712
56,502

402,169
80,375

202,796
46,929

222,956
59,821

78,884
22,368

74,659
24,613

474,785
120,635

95,148
25,340

Moderately effectivee

1,076,810

44,069

107,320

114,668

237,721

116,299

109,036

42,798

39,922

210,578

54,399

483,104

18,488

59,511

44,542

84,073

39,568

54,099

13,718

10,124

143,572

15,409

90,729

7,333

8,026

13,287

22,288

5,370

11,205

2,599

1,968

15,616

3,037

Not Using a Method

375,714

15,792

39,018

40,198

95,998

34,920

48,771

13,455

9,429

65,247

12,886

Method Unknown

146,367

5,318

5,862

50,003

45,789

12,687

2,173

2,137

100

22,251

47

Total Female Users
Using Most, Moderately, or
Less Effective Methode

Less effectivee
Abstinence

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
a
Includes both 3-month and 1-month hormonal injection users.
b
FAMs include Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
c
User refrained from oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse.
d
Includes withdrawal or any other method not listed in FPAR Table 7.
e
Most effective methods include vasectomy, female sterilization, implant, and intrauterine device. Moderately effective methods include hormonal methods (injection, pill, patch,
and ring), diaphragm with spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male and female condoms, withdrawal, sponge, spermicide (used alone),
FAM or LAM, and other methods not listed in Table 7. See Table 7 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 21. Distribution of female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7)
Primary Method
Female sterilization
Intrauterine device
Hormonal implant
Hormonal injection
Oral contraceptive
Contraceptive patch
Vaginal ring
Cervical cap or diaphragm
Contraceptive sponge
Female condom
Spermicide (used alone)
FAM or LAMb
Abstinencec
Withdrawal or other methodd
Rely on Male Method
Vasectomy
Male condom
No Method
Pregnant/seeking pregnancy
Other reason
Method Unknown
Total Female Users

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

3%
9%
7%
15%a
22%
1%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
3%
3%

4%
13%
8%
12%a
21%
1%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
6%
2%

2%
11%
6%
12%
24%
2%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
3%
2%

3%
7%
7%
14%a
20%
1%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
4%
2%

3%
5%
6%
18%a
22%
1%
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
4%
4%

3%
9%
6%
17%
25%
1%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
2%
2%

5%
7%
8%
16%a
20%
1%
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
4%
5%

5%
11%
7%
20%a
22%
1%
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
3%
2%

2%
16%
10%
16%a
26%
1%
3%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
2%
2%

2%
10%
8%
11%a
22%
2%
2%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
1%
3%
2%

1%
13%
8%
16%
28%
2%
3%
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
0%†
3%
4%

0%†
14%

0%†
13%

0%†
19%

0%†
12%

0%†
9%

0%†
14%

0%†
13%

0%†
12%

0%†
9%

0%†
22%

1%
9%

8%
6%
5%
100%

7%
6%
4%
100%

8%
6%
2%
100%

6%
7%
16%
100%

10%
7%
8%
100%

7%
7%
5%
100%

10%
8%
1%
100%

9%
4%
2%
100%

6%
5%
0%†
100%

6%
5%
4%
100%

5%
7%
0%†
100%

Using Most, Moderately, or
Less Effective Methode

77%

77%

80%

68%

71%

79%

78%

81%

87%

82%

86%

Most effectivee
Moderately effectivee
Less effectivee
Abstinence
Not Using a Method
Method Unknown

19%
40%
18%
3%
14%
5%

26%
36%
15%
6%
13%
4%

19%
40%
22%
3%
14%
2%

18%
36%
14%
4%
13%
16%

14%
42%
15%
4%
17%
8%

18%
45%
15%
2%
14%
5%

21%
38%
19%
4%
17%
1%

23%
44%
14%
3%
14%
2%

29%
46%
12%
2%
11%
0%†

21%
36%
25%
3%
11%
4%

23%
49%
14%
3%
12%
0%†

35

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
a
Includes both 3-month and 1-month hormonal injection users.
b
FAMs include Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
c
User refrained from oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse.
d
Includes withdrawal or any other method not listed in FPAR Table 7.
e
Most effective methods include vasectomy, female sterilization, implant, and intrauterine device. Moderately effective methods include hormonal methods (injection, pill, patch,
and ring), diaphragm with spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male and female condoms, withdrawal, sponge, spermicide (used alone),
FAM or LAM, and other methods not listed in Table 7. See Table 7 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

36

Exhibit 22. Number of male family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and age: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 8)
All Age
Groups

Under 15
Years

15 to 17
Years

18 to 19
Years

20 to 24
Years

25 to 29
Years

30 to 34
Years

35 to 39
Years

40 to 44
Years

Over 44
Years

2,913

0

0

0

53

213

438

598

603

1,008

225,977

1,615

12,003

18,419

56,462

50,283

33,337

20,805

12,583

20,470

3,747

5

52

131

550

702

576

527

426

778

35,183

8,193

8,347

2,842

2,853

2,217

1,892

1,602

1,408

5,829

Withdrawal or other methodc

12,912

175

681

744

2,107

2,134

1,815

1,578

1,123

2,555

Rely on female method

32,507

114

593

1,411

5,393

5,951

4,760

3,936

3,135

7,214

4,916

62

149

204

933

1,096

925

644

369

534

Other reason

45,850

580

1,414

2,095

7,187

7,739

5,997

4,685

3,839

12,314

Method Unknown

41,109

3,071

2,456

1,922

5,892

6,191

5,037

4,025

2,938

9,577

Total Male Users

405,114

13,815

25,695

27,768

81,430

76,526

54,777

38,400

26,424

60,279

Using most, moderately, or less
effective methode

278,056

1,909

13,329

20,705

64,565

59,283

40,926

27,444

17,870

32,025

Abstinenceb

35,183

8,193

8,347

2,842

2,853

2,217

1,892

1,602

1,408

5,829

Not using a method

50,766

642

1,563

2,299

8,120

8,835

6,922

5,329

4,208

12,848

Method unknown

41,109

3,071

2,456

1,922

5,892

6,191

5,037

4,025

2,938

9,577

Primary Method
Vasectomy
Male condom
FAM or LAM

a

Abstinenceb

d

No Method
Partner pregnant/seeking pregnancy

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
a
FAMs include Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
b
User refrained from oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse.
c
Includes withdrawal or any other method not listed in FPAR Table 8.
d
Primary method of user’s sex partner was female sterilization, intrauterine device, hormonal implant, hormonal injection, oral contraceptive, contraceptive patch, vaginal ring, female
barrier method (cervical cap, diaphragm, sponge, female condom), spermicide, or the lactational amenorrhea method.
e
Most effective methods include vasectomy, female sterilization, implant, and intrauterine device. Moderately effective methods include hormonal methods (injection, pill, patch,
and ring), diaphragm with spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male and female condoms, withdrawal, sponge, spermicide (used alone),
FAM or LAM, and other methods not listed in Table 8. See Table 8 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 23. Distribution of male family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and age: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 8)
All Age
Groups

Primary Method
Vasectomy

Under 15
Years

15 to 17
Years

18 to 19
Years

1%

0%

0%

0%

Male condom

56%

12%

47%

66%

FAM or LAM

1%

a

Abstinenceb

0%†

0%†

0%†

20 to 24
Years

25 to 29
Years

0%†

0%†

30 to 34
Years

35 to 39
Years

40 to 44
Years

Over 44
Years

1%

2%

2%

2%

69%

66%

61%

54%

48%

34%

1%

1%

1%

1%

2%

1%

9%

59%

32%

10%

4%

3%

3%

4%

5%

10%

Withdrawal or other methodc

3%

1%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

4%

4%

4%

Rely on female method

8%

1%

2%

5%

7%

8%

9%

10%

12%

12%

No Method
Partner pregnant/seeking pregnancy

1%

0%†

1%

1%

1%

1%

2%

2%

1%

1%

Other reason

11%

4%

6%

8%

9%

10%

11%

12%

15%

20%

Method Unknown

10%

22%

10%

7%

7%

8%

9%

10%

11%

16%

Total Male Users

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

69%

14%

52%

75%

79%

77%

75%

71%

68%

53%

9%

59%

32%

10%

4%

3%

3%

4%

5%

10%

Not using a method

13%

5%

6%

8%

10%

12%

13%

14%

16%

21%

Method unknown

10%

22%

10%

7%

7%

8%

9%

10%

11%

16%

d

Using most, moderately, or less
effective methode
Abstinenceb

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
a
FAMs include Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
b
User refrained from oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse.
c
Includes withdrawal or any other method not listed in FPAR Table 8.
d
Primary method of user’s sex partner was female sterilization, intrauterine device, hormonal implant, hormonal injection, oral contraceptive, contraceptive patch, vaginal ring, female
barrier method (cervical cap, diaphragm, sponge, female condom), spermicide, or the lactational amenorrhea method.
e
Most effective methods include vasectomy, female sterilization, implant, and intrauterine device. Moderately effective methods include hormonal methods (injection, pill, patch,
and ring), diaphragm with spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male and female condoms, withdrawal, sponge, spermicide (used alone),
FAM or LAM, and other methods not listed in Table 8. See Table 8 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

37

38

Exhibit 24. Number of male family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 8)
All
Regions

Primary Method
Vasectomy

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII Region VIII Region IX

Region X

2,913

184

190

255

694

293

247

112

293

417

228

225,977

11,107

27,966

22,746

30,374

25,938

19,921

8,836

10,922

62,591

5,576

3,747

27

43

59

1,636

19

1,595

14

14

332

8

35,183

3,820

1,647

5,382

11,832

1,597

4,580

523

877

4,026

899

Withdrawal or other methodc

12,912

537

1,345

1,247

3,726

641

1,204

608

778

1,614

1,212

Rely on female method

32,507

1,984

778

3,039

10,707

3,447

2,902

1,217

3,536

4,582

315

4,916

247

260

402

1,748

238

793

157

224

737

110

Other reason

45,850

3,655

5,075

4,237

12,128

3,972

4,106

1,078

1,992

8,110

1,497

Method Unknown

41,109

1,836

1,085

17,932

9,510

3,190

942

743

22

5,839

10

Total Male Users

405,114

23,397

38,389

55,299

82,355

39,335

36,290

13,288

18,658

88,248

9,855

Using most, moderately, or less
effective methode

278,056

13,839

30,322

27,346

47,137

30,338

25,869

10,787

15,543

69,536

7,339

Abstinenceb

35,183

3,820

1,647

5,382

11,832

1,597

4,580

523

877

4,026

899

Not using a method

50,766

3,902

5,335

4,639

13,876

4,210

4,899

1,235

2,216

8,847

1,607

Method unknown

41,109

1,836

1,085

17,932

9,510

3,190

942

743

22

5,839

10

Male condom
FAM or LAM

a

Abstinenceb

d

No Method
Partner pregnant/seeking pregnancy

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
a
FAMs include Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
b
User refrained from oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse.
c
Includes withdrawal or any other method not listed in FPAR Table 8.
d
Primary method of user’s sex partner was female sterilization, intrauterine device, hormonal implant, hormonal injection, oral contraceptive, contraceptive patch, vaginal ring, female
barrier method (cervical cap, diaphragm, sponge, female condom), spermicide, or the lactational amenorrhea method.
e
Most effective methods include vasectomy, female sterilization, implant, and intrauterine device. Moderately effective methods include hormonal methods (injection, pill, patch,
and ring), diaphragm with spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male and female condoms, withdrawal, sponge, spermicide (used alone),
FAM or LAM, and other methods not listed in Table 8. See Table 8 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 25. Distribution of male family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 8)
All
Regions

Primary Method
Vasectomy

Region I

1%

1%

Male condom

56%

47%

FAM or LAM

1%

a

Abstinenceb

0%†

Region II
0%†
73%
0%†

Region III
0%†
41%
0%†

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII Region VIII Region IX

1%

1%

1%

1%

2%

37%

66%

55%

66%

59%

0%†
71%

Region X
2%
57%

2%

0%†

4%

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

9%

16%

4%

10%

14%

4%

13%

4%

5%

5%

9%

Withdrawal or other methodc

3%

2%

4%

2%

5%

2%

3%

5%

4%

2%

12%

Rely on female method

8%

8%

2%

5%

13%

9%

8%

9%

19%

5%

3%

No Method
Partner pregnant/seeking pregnancy

1%

1%

1%

1%

2%

1%

2%

1%

1%

1%

1%

Other reason

11%

16%

13%

8%

15%

10%

11%

8%

11%

9%

15%

Method Unknown

10%

8%

3%

32%

12%

8%

3%

6%

Total Male Users

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

69%

59%

79%

49%

57%

77%

71%

81%

83%

79%

74%

9%

16%

4%

10%

14%

4%

13%

4%

5%

5%

9%

Not using a method

13%

17%

14%

8%

17%

11%

13%

9%

12%

10%

16%

Method unknown

10%

8%

3%

32%

12%

8%

3%

6%

d

Using most, moderately, or less
effective methode
Abstinenceb

0%†

0%†

7%

7%

0%†

0%†

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
a
FAMs include Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
b
User refrained from oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse.
c
Includes withdrawal or any other method not listed in FPAR Table 8.
d
Primary method of user’s sex partner was female sterilization, intrauterine device, hormonal implant, hormonal injection, oral contraceptive, contraceptive patch, vaginal ring, female
barrier method (cervical cap, diaphragm, sponge, female condom), spermicide, or the lactational amenorrhea method.
e
Most effective methods include vasectomy, female sterilization, implant, and intrauterine device. Moderately effective methods include hormonal methods (injection, pill, patch,
and ring), diaphragm with spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male and female condoms, withdrawal, sponge, spermicide (used alone),
FAM or LAM, and other methods not listed in Table 8. See Table 8 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

39

Selected Guidance for Reporting Cervical and Breast Cancer Screening Activities in FPAR Tables 9 and 10
In FPAR Table 9, grantees report information on cervical
cancer screening activities, including the following:
■

Unduplicated number of female users who obtained a Pap
test

■

Number of Pap tests performed

■

Number of Pap tests with a result of Atypical Squamous
Cells (ASC) or higher according to the 2014 Bethesda
System.19 ASC or higher results include ASC-US; ASC-H;
LSIL; HSIL; squamous cell carcinoma; atypical glandular
cells (AGC); AGC, favor neoplastic; endocervical
adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS); adenocarcinoma; or other
malignant neoplasms. These abbreviations and terms are
defined below.

■

Number of Pap tests with a result of High-Grade
Squamous Intraepithelial Lesion (HSIL) or higher
according to the 2014 Bethesda System.19 HSIL or higher
results include HSIL; squamous cell carcinoma; AGC;
AGC, favor neoplastic; endocervical AIS;
adenocarcinoma; or other malignant neoplasms. These
abbreviations and terms are defined below.

and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) 1 are other
terms for referring to LSILs.20
■

■

■

Atypical squamous cells of undetermined
significance (ASC-US) or atypical squamous cells,
cannot exclude HSIL (ASC-H) is a finding of abnormal
squamous cells in the tissue lining the outer part of the
cervix. ASC-US is the most common abnormal finding
in a Pap test. An ASC-US result may be caused by a
human papillomavirus (HPV), a benign growth
(e.g., cyst or polyp), or low hormone levels in
menopausal women. ASC-H may be a sign of a
high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL),
which may become cervical cancer if untreated.20
Low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL) is
a finding of slightly abnormal cells on the surface of the
cervix caused by certain types of HPV. LSIL is a
common abnormal finding on a Pap test. Mild dysplasia

Squamous cell carcinoma is a finding of cancer in the
squamous cells of the cervix.20

The 2014 Bethesda System19 classifies glandular cell
abnormalities into the following categories:
■

Atypical glandular cells (AGC) is a finding of abnormal
cells that come from glands in the walls of the cervix. The
presence of these abnormal cells may be a sign of more
serious lesions or cancer.20 The 2014 Bethesda System19
subdivides AGCs into two categories:
– AGC (endocervical, endometrial, or glandular cells),
not otherwise specified

The 2014 Bethesda System19 classifies squamous cell
abnormalities into the following categories:
■

High-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL)
is a growth on the surface of the cervix with moderately
or severely abnormal cells. HSILs are usually caused
by certain types of HPV. If not treated, these abnormal
cells may become cancer and spread to normal tissue.
HSIL encompasses moderate dysplasia (CIN 2) or
severe dysplasia and carcinoma in situ (CIN 3).20

– AGC (endocervical or glandular cells), favor
neoplastic
■

Endocervical adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS) is a finding
of abnormal cells found in the glandular tissue lining the
endocervical canal. AIS may become cancer and spread
to nearby normal tissue.20

■

Adenocarcinoma is a finding of cancer in endocervical,
endometrial, extrauterine, or not otherwise specified
glandular tissue.20

In FPAR Table 10, grantees report the following information
on breast cancer screening and referral activities:
■

Unduplicated number of female users receiving a clinical
breast exam (CBE)

■

Unduplicated number of female users referred for further
evaluation based on CBE results

Note: For detailed reporting guidance, please refer to the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016), pp. 33–36.5

40

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

6 Related Preventive Health Services
To support effective contraceptive use and practices, federal regulations2,3 specify that
Title X-funded projects must provide for medical services related to family planning and
referral to other medical facilities when medically necessary. According to the QFP
Recommendations,16 providers should assess a client’s need for related preventive health
services (e.g., cervical and breast cancer screening, STD services) and provide these services
according to federal and professional recommendations regarding frequency, client eligibility,
and procedures. This assessment is especially important for clients whose only source of
health care is the Title X service site.

CERVICAL AND BREAST CANCER SCREENING
Cervical Cancer Screening (Exhibit 26)
In 2019, Title X service sites provided Papanicolaou (Pap) testing to 20% (541,661) of female
family planning users and performed 561,534 Pap tests (just over 1.0 test per female tested).
Of the Pap tests performed, 13% had an indeterminate or abnormal result (i.e., atypical
squamous cells [ASC] or higher result) requiring further evaluation and possible treatment,
and 1% had a result of high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL) or higher,
indicating the presence of a more severe condition (Exhibit 26).
By region, the percentage of total female users who received a Pap test ranged from 14% to
27%. In addition, from 10% to 26% of Pap tests had an ASC or higher result, and 1% of Pap
tests in all regions had an HSIL or higher result (Exhibit 26).
See Exhibits A–10a and A–10b for trends (2009 through 2019) in cervical cancer screening.

Breast Cancer Screening (Exhibit 26)
In 2019, Title X service sites provided clinical breast exams (CBEs) to 23% (627,282) of
female users and referred 5% (31,595) of those examined for further evaluation based on the
results of the CBE (Exhibit 26).
By region, from 12% to 36% of female users received a CBE, and from 2% to 12% of those
examined were referred for further evaluation (Exhibit 26).

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

41

42

Exhibit 26. Cervical and breast cancer screening activities, by screening test or exam and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Tables 9 and 10)
Tests/Exams
Pap Tests
Female users tested
Numbera
Percentage

b

Tests performed
Number
Tests per female tested
Tests with ASC or higher result
Number
Percentagec
Tests with HSIL or higher result
Number
Percentage

c

Clinical Breast Exams
Female users examined
Numbera

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Percentage

b

Female users referred based on
exam
Number
Percentage

d

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region IX

Region X

541,661

17,826

47,646

55,875

145,704

36,145

76,621

22,424

16,515

106,743

16,162

20%

15%

18%

18%

26%

14%

27%

23%

19%

18%

15%

561,534

17,967

48,921

59,891

149,064

36,880

81,391

22,772

18,016

110,398

16,234

1.0

1.0

1.0

1.1

1.0

1.0

1.1

1.0

1.1

1.0

1.0

72,212

3,074

8,510

9,039

13%

17%

17%

15%

14,522

4,325

9,750

3,260

3,066

12,450

4,216

10%

12%

12%

14%

17%

11%

26%

6,113

261

627

725

1,835

316

603

261

135

1,162

188

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

627,282

22,986

57,410

73,042

195,296

40,833

102,174

32,153

23,504

66,553

13,331

23%

19%

21%

23%

34%

16%

36%

33%

27%

12%

12%

31,595

1,646

2,541

2,958

6,063

2,605

5,589

1,835

383

7,665

310

5%

7%

4%

4%

3%

6%

5%

6%

2%

12%

2%

ASC=atypical squamous cells. HSIL=high-grade squamous epithelial lesion.
a
Unduplicated number of female users.
b
Denominator is the total unduplicated number of female users.
c
Denominator is the total number of Pap tests performed.
d
Denominator is the total unduplicated number of users examined.

Region VII Region VIII

SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASE TESTING
Through screening and testing, Title X service providers help to prevent and treat STDs. If
left untreated, STDs can be transmitted to others and lead to serious and lifelong health
consequences for women, men, infants, and unborn babies.21 According to the QFP
Recommendations,16 STD services are integral to family planning services because they
improve health and can affect a person’s ability to conceive and have a healthy birth outcome.
The QFP Recommendations advise providers to offer STD services to clients, both
symptomatic and asymptomatic, in accordance with the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s (CDC’s) Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2015.22

Chlamydia Testing (Exhibits 27 and 28)
Chlamydia Testing of Female Users. CDC recommends routine annual chlamydia screening
for all sexually active women under 25 and for sexually active women 25 or older who may
be at increased risk of infection (e.g., new or multiple sex partners, a sex partner with
concurrent partners, or a sex partner with an STD). For sexually active women with HIV,
CDC recommends chlamydia screening at the first HIV evaluation and at least annually
thereafter unless risk behaviors and the local epidemiology warrant more frequent
screening.22
In 2019, Title X service sites tested 49% (1.3 million) of all female users for chlamydia and
58% (644,080) of females under 25 (Exhibits 27 and 28).

▪ By age group, chlamydia testing rates were higher among females 15 to 24 (57% to 60%)
than among those over 24 (43%) or under 15 (37%) (Exhibits 27 and 28).

▪ By region, the chlamydia testing rate for females under 25 ranged from 51% to 63%
(Exhibits 27 and 28).

▪ By state, the chlamydia testing rate for females under 25 ranged from 11% to 100%
(Exhibit B–5).

See Exhibits A–11a and A–11b for trends (2009 through 2019) in chlamydia testing.
Selected Guidance for Reporting STD Testing Activities in FPAR Tables 11 and 12
In FPAR Table 11, grantees report the unduplicated number
of family planning users tested for chlamydia, by age
(<15, 15–17, 18–19, 20–24, and 25 or over) and sex.
In FPAR Table 12, grantees report the number of STD and
HIV tests performed during the reporting period that are
provided within the scope of the grantee’s Title X project.
STD tests that are performed in STD clinics operated by
Title X-funded agencies should be excluded unless the
activities of the STD clinic are within the scope of the
agency’s Title X project.

STD testing information includes the following:
■

Number of gonorrhea tests performed, by sex

■

Number of syphilis tests performed, by sex

■

Number of confidential HIV tests performed, by sex

■

Number of confidential HIV tests with a positive result

■

Number of anonymous HIV tests performed

Note: For detailed reporting guidance, please refer to the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016), pp. 39–40.5

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

43

44

Exhibit 27. Number of family planning users tested for chlamydia, by sex, age, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 11)
Age Group (Years)

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

Female Users
Under 15

12,574

631

874

2,560

2,954

1,026

1,634

460

393

1,546

496

15 to 17

103,542

4,463

8,457

13,956

21,665

10,238

11,525

4,546

4,228

18,941

5,523

18 to 19

149,612

5,762

13,841

16,334

30,662

15,811

15,738

6,325

5,855

32,374

6,910

20 to 24

378,352

14,188

36,736

37,149

75,994

39,726

38,456

14,049

12,818

92,709

16,527

Over 24

687,551

27,967

69,335

79,504

158,536

61,965

75,477

23,257

15,444

155,045

21,021

1,331,631

53,011

129,243

149,503

289,811

128,766

142,830

48,637

38,738

300,615

50,477

Under 25

644,080

25,044

59,908

69,999

131,275

66,801

67,353

25,380

23,294

145,570

29,456

Male Users
Under 15

2,300

271

187

959

252

56

197

58

27

285

8

15 to 17

12,120

1,074

1,150

2,788

1,387

923

1,012

454

508

2,560

264

18 to 19

19,198

1,194

2,241

2,718

2,094

2,195

1,618

1,014

977

4,631

516

20 to 24

62,325

3,260

6,681

6,883

6,879

8,852

4,843

3,097

3,310

16,839

1,681

Over 24

149,669

7,674

13,536

18,661

19,545

18,958

12,702

5,580

8,407

40,745

3,861

Subtotal

245,612

13,473

23,795

32,009

30,157

30,984

20,372

10,203

13,229

65,060

6,330

Subtotal
a

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

All Users
Under 15

14,874

902

1,061

3,519

3,206

1,082

1,831

518

420

1,831

504

15 to 17

115,662

5,537

9,607

16,744

23,052

11,161

12,537

5,000

4,736

21,501

5,787

18 to 19

168,810

6,956

16,082

19,052

32,756

18,006

17,356

7,339

6,832

37,005

7,426

20 to 24

440,677

17,448

43,417

44,032

82,873

48,578

43,299

17,146

16,128

109,548

18,208

837,220

35,641

82,871

98,165

178,081

80,923

88,179

28,837

23,851

195,790

24,882

1,577,243

66,484

153,038

181,512

319,968

159,750

163,202

58,840

51,967

365,675

56,807

Over 24
Total All Users
a

All Regions

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends routine annual chlamydia screening for all sexually active women 24 years or younger and for older (25
years or older) women at increased risk of infection (e.g., with a new or multiple sex partners, a sex partner with concurrent partners, or sexual partner with an STD). The U.S.
Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends screening for chlamydial infection in sexually active women 24 years or younger and in older women who are at increased
risk for infection. In the absence of studies on screening intervals, the USPSTF recommends rescreening women whose sexual history reveals new or persistent risk factors since
the last negative test result. (Sources: CDC [2015]. Sexually transmitted diseases treatment guidelines, 2015. MMWR, 64[No. RR–3], 1–137 [see reference 22] and USPSTF [2014,
September]. Gonorrhea and chlamydia: Screening [see reference 23].)

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 28. Percentage of family planning users in each age group tested for chlamydia, by sex, age, and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 11)
Age Group (Years)

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

Female Users
Under 15

37%

31%

36%

33%

35%

42%

50%

38%

32%

38%

43%

15 to 17

57%

46%

56%

53%

59%

56%

61%

58%

54%

62%

56%

18 to 19

60%

53%

59%

57%

61%

58%

61%

62%

56%

65%

59%

20 to 24

59%

53%

57%

56%

60%

57%

60%

61%

53%

63%

56%

Over 24

43%

38%

42%

42%

46%

45%

43%

42%

36%

45%

36%

49%

43%

48%

47%

51%

50%

50%

50%

45%

52%

45%

Under 25

58%

51%

57%

54%

59%

57%

60%

60%

53%

63%

56%

Male Users
Under 15

17%

24%

18%

23%

6%

14%

27%

33%

6%

19%

22%

15 to 17

47%

46%

42%

45%

29%

70%

51%

69%

47%

62%

55%

18 to 19

69%

70%

66%

66%

49%

84%

58%

82%

75%

82%

77%

Subtotal
a

a

20 to 24

77%

78%

76%

73%

58%

84%

70%

83%

76%

86%

79%

Over 24

58%

55%

60%

60%

34%

77%

53%

74%

73%

71%

59%

Subtotal

61%

58%

62%

58%

37%

79%

56%

77%

71%

74%

64%

All Users
Under 15

31%

28%

31%

30%

25%

38%

46%

37%

25%

33%

42%

15 to 17

56%

46%

54%

51%

56%

57%

60%

59%

53%

62%

56%

18 to 19

61%

56%

59%

58%

60%

60%

61%

64%

58%

67%

60%

20 to 24

61%

56%

59%

58%

60%

60%

61%

64%

57%

65%

58%

Over 24

45%

41%

45%

44%

44%

50%

45%

46%

44%

49%

38%

Total All Users

51%

46%

50%

48%

49%

54%

51%

53%

50%

55%

47%

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends routine annual chlamydia screening for all sexually active women 24 years or younger and for older (25
years or older) women at increased risk of infection (e.g., with a new or multiple sex partners, a sex partner with concurrent partners, or sexual partner with an STD). The U.S.
Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends screening for chlamydial infection in sexually active women 24 years or younger and in older women who are at increased
risk for infection. In the absence of studies on screening intervals, the USPSTF recommends rescreening women whose sexual history reveals new or persistent risk factors since
the last negative test result. (Sources: CDC [2015]. Sexually transmitted diseases treatment guidelines, 2015. MMWR, 64[No. RR–3], 1–137 [see reference 22] and USPSTF [2014,
September]. Gonorrhea and chlamydia: Screening [see reference 23].)

45

Chlamydia Testing of Male Users. CDC recommends that providers consider screening young men for
chlamydia in high-prevalence clinical settings (e.g., adolescent clinics, correctional facilities, and STD clinics)
and in populations with a high burden of infection (e.g., men who have sex with men [MSM]). In addition,
CDC recommends screening sexually active MSM at anatomic sites of contact (urethra and rectum), regardless
of condom use, at least annually or more frequently (every 3 to 6 months) if at increased risk. For sexually
active men with HIV, CDC recommends chlamydia screening at the first HIV evaluation and at least annually
thereafter unless risk behaviors and the local epidemiology warrant more frequent screening.22
In 2019, Title X service sites tested 61% (245,612) of all male users for chlamydia
(Exhibits 27 and 28).

▪ By age group, rates of chlamydia testing were higher for males 18 to 19 (69%) and 20 to 24 (77%) and
lower for males over 24 (58%), 15 to 17 (47%), and under 15 (17%).

▪ By region, Title X service sites tested between 37% and 79% of all male users for chlamydia.
Gonorrhea Testing (Exhibit 29)
CDC recommends annual gonorrhea screening for all sexually active women under 25 and for sexually active
older women (25 or older) at increased risk of infection (e.g., new or multiple sex partners, a sex partner with
concurrent partners, a sex partner who has an STD, inconsistent condom use among persons who are not in
mutually monogamous relationships, previous or coexisting STDs, or exchanging sex for drugs or money).
CDC also recommends screening sexually active MSM at least annually or more frequently (every 3 to
6 months) if at increased risk at anatomic sites of contact (urethra, rectum, and pharynx), regardless of condom
use. Finally, CDC recommends screening sexually active persons with HIV for gonorrhea at the first HIV
evaluation and at least annually thereafter unless individual risk behaviors and the local epidemiology warrant
more frequent screening.22
In 2019, Title X service sites performed nearly 1.8 million gonorrhea tests, or an average of 5.5 gonorrhea tests
for every 10 female users and 6.8 tests for every 10 male users. By region, the rate of gonorrhea testing ranged
from 4.8 to 5.9 tests for every 10 female users and from 4.0 to 9.0 tests for every 10 male users (Exhibit 29).

Syphilis Testing (Exhibit 29)
CDC recommends syphilis screening for sexually active MSM at least annually or more frequently based on
subsequent behavior. CDC also recommends screening sexually active persons with HIV at the first HIV
evaluation and at least annually thereafter unless individual risk behaviors and the local epidemiology warrant
more frequent screening.22
In 2019, Title X service sites performed 674,764 syphilis tests, or an average of 1.9 syphilis tests for every
10 female users and 3.9 tests for every 10 male users. By region, the rate of syphilis testing ranged from 0.4
tests to 3.0 tests for every 10 female users and from 2.7 tests to 5.5 tests for every 10 male users (Exhibit 29).

HIV Testing (Exhibit 29)
CDC recommends HIV screening (opt-out approach) for men and women 13 to 64 in all health care settings,
including family planning, and for all persons who seek evaluation and treatment for STDs. CDC also
recommends HIV screening at least annually for sexually active MSM if their HIV status is unknown or

46

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

negative and the client or their sex partner(s) have had more than one sex partner since their most recent HIV
test.22
In 2019, Title X service sites performed 961,859 confidential HIV tests, or an average of 2.8 confidential HIV
tests for every 10 female users and 5.3 tests for every 10 male users. Of the confidential HIV tests performed,
3,685, or 3.8 tests per 1,000 tests performed, were positive for HIV. In addition, Title X sites performed
613 anonymous HIV tests. By region, the rate of HIV testing ranged from 1.2 test to 3.8 tests for every
10 female users and from 3.0 tests to 7.9 tests for every 10 male users (Exhibit 29).
See Exhibits A–12a and A–12b for trends (2009 through 2019) in confidential HIV testing among female and
male users.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

47

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 29. Number of gonorrhea, syphilis, and HIV tests performed, by test type and region, and number of positive HIV tests, by region: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 12)
STD Tests

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

1,476,781

63,399

145,165

173,067

310,289

147,429

159,992

55,840

51,191

Male

274,410

16,224

26,501

36,299

32,723

35,276

22,919

10,910

16,212

70,378

6,968

Total

1,751,191

79,623

171,666

209,366

343,012

182,705

182,911

66,750

67,403

387,217

60,538

5.5

5.2

5.4

5.4

5.5

5.8

5.6

5.8

5.9

5.5

4.8

Male

6.8

6.9

6.9

6.6

4.0

9.0

6.3

8.2

8.7

8.0

7.1

Total

5.7

5.5

5.6

5.6

5.3

6.2

5.7

6.0

6.4

5.8

5.0

516,439

13,743

27,844

64,203

171,479

27,090

78,740

14,878

4,598

109,114

4,750

Gonorrhea Tests
Female

Tests per 10 Users
Female

Syphilis Tests
Female

All Regions

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

316,839

53,570

Male

158,325

6,209

11,899

23,764

23,048

13,383

18,184

4,722

5,453

48,498

3,165

Total

674,764

19,952

39,743

87,967

194,527

40,473

96,924

19,600

10,051

157,612

7,915

1.9

1.1

1.0

2.0

3.0

1.1

2.8

1.5

0.5

1.9

0.4

Male

3.9

2.7

3.1

4.3

2.8

3.4

5.0

3.6

2.9

5.5

3.2

Total

2.2

1.4

1.3

2.3

3.0

1.4

3.0

1.8

1.0

2.4

0.7

745,213

23,540

81,644

85,165

188,468

57,684

109,658

20,517

13,161

152,314

13,062

Male

216,646

8,164

23,675

29,706

25,061

20,976

21,136

6,941

14,825

61,444

4,718

Total

961,859

31,704

105,319

114,871

213,529

78,660

130,794

27,458

27,986

213,758

17,780

2.8

1.9

3.0

2.7

3.3

2.3

3.8

2.1

1.5

2.6

1.2

5.3

3.5

6.2

5.4

3.0

5.3

5.8

5.2

7.9

7.0

4.8

Tests per 10 Users
Female

Confidential HIV Tests
Female

Tests per 10 Users
Female
Male
Total
Positive Test Results
Anonymous HIV Tests

3.1

2.2

3.4

3.1

3.3

2.7

4.1

2.5

2.7

3.2

1.5

3,685

97

645

409

1,345

120

471

45

144

360

49

613

30

0

14

0

95

0

166

0

230

78

48

7 Staffing and Service Utilization
STAFFING AND FAMILY PLANNING ENCOUNTERS
Clinical Services Provider Staffing (Exhibit 30)
Highly trained clinical services providers (CSPs) participate in the delivery of Title X-funded
services. CSPs include physicians, physician assistants (PAs), nurse practitioners (NPs),
certified nurse midwives (CNMs), and registered nurses with an expanded scope of practice
(“other” CSPs) who are trained and permitted by state-specific regulations to perform all
aspects of the user (male and female) physical assessments recommended for contraceptive,
related preventive health, and basic infertility care, as described in the Title X program
requirements.2
In 2019, 3,678 full-time equivalent (FTE) CSPs delivered medical family planning and
related preventive health services in Title X service sites (Exhibit 30).

▪ By type of CSP, midlevel clinicians (i.e., PAs, NPs, and CNMs) accounted for 67% of

total FTEs, followed by physicians (24%) and other CSPs (9%). On average, there were
2.8 midlevel clinician FTEs for every 1.0 physician FTE.

▪ By region, from 8% to 32% of total FTEs were physician FTEs, 51% to 86% were

midlevel clinician FTEs, and 0% to 26% were other CSP FTEs. There were from 1.6 to
7.9 midlevel clinician FTEs for every 1.0 physician FTE.

Family Planning Encounters (Exhibit 30)
In 2019, Title X service sites reported a total of almost 4.7 million family planning
encounters, or an average of 1.5 encounters per user (Exhibit 30).

▪ By type, most family planning encounters (77%, or 3.6 million) were attended by a CSP,
resulting in an average of 1.2 CSP encounters per user and 979 CSP encounters per CSP
FTE.

▪ By region, the number and types of family planning encounters varied as follows:
– Number of encounters per user: The average number of encounters per user ranged
from 1.1 to 1.8.
– CSP encounters: The percentage of encounters that were attended by a CSP ranged
from 60% to 95%, and the number of CSP encounters per CSP FTE ranged from 566 to
1,570.
– Non-CSP encounters: The percentage of encounters that were attended by non-CSP
staff ranged from 5% to 40%. The number of non-CSP encounters per user ranged from
0.1 to 0.7.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

49

Selected Guidance for Reporting Staffing and Encounter Data in FPAR Table 13
In FPAR Table 13, grantees report the following information
on the level of clinical provider staffing and the number of
family planning encounters:
■

Number of full-time equivalent (FTE) family planning
Clinical Services Providers by type of provider,

■

Number of family planning encounters with Clinical
Services Providers, and

■

Number of family planning encounters with Other
Services Providers.

Family Planning Provider—The individual who assumes
primary responsibility for assessing a client and documenting
services in the client record. Providers exercise independent
judgment as to the services rendered to the client during an
encounter. There are two types of family planning providers:
■

Clinical Services Providers (CSPs) include physicians,
physician assistants, nurse practitioners, certified nurse
midwives, and registered nurses with an expanded scope
of practice who are trained and permitted by state-specific
regulations to perform all aspects of the user (male and
female) physical assessments recommended for
contraceptive, related preventive health, and basic
infertility care. CSPs offer a range of clinical, counseling,
and educational services relating to a client’s proposed or
adopted method of contraception, general reproductive
health, or infertility treatment, in accordance with the
Title X program requirements.2

■

Other Services Providers include other agency staff
(e.g., registered nurses, public health nurses, licensed
vocational or licensed practical nurses, certified nurse
assistants, health educators, social workers, or clinic
aides) that offer client education, counseling, referral, or
follow-up services relating to the client’s proposed or
adopted method of contraception, general reproductive
health, or infertility treatment, as described in the Title X
program requirements.2

Family Planning Encounter—A documented, face-to-face
contact between an individual and a family planning provider
that takes place in a Title X service site. The purpose of a
family planning encounter is to provide family planning and
related preventive health services to female and male clients
who want to avoid unintended pregnancies or achieve
intended pregnancies. Laboratory tests and related
counseling and education do not constitute a family planning
encounter unless the encounter is face-to-face, documented,
and includes family planning counseling or education.
The two types of family planning encounters are
classified based on the type of family planning provider who
renders the care: an encounter with a CSP or an encounter
with an Other Services Provider.
Full-Time Equivalent (FTE)—For each type of CSP,
grantees report the time in FTEs that CSP providers are
involved in the direct provision of Title X-funded services
(i.e., engaged in a family planning encounter). An FTE of 1.0
describes staff who, individually or as a group, work the
equivalent of full time for 1 year. Each agency defines the
number of hours for “full-time” work and may define it
differently for different positions.

Note: For detailed reporting guidance, please refer to the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016), pp. 43–45.5

50

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 30. Number and distribution of FTE CSP staff, by type of CSP and region, and number and distribution of FP encounters, by type of encounter
and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 13)
All
Regions

Region I

884.0

106.4

82.3

214.8

203.6

25.3

43.3

23.0

12.2

119.9

53.3

2,449.6

168.1

207.2

474.4

595.3

200.4

172.6

79.5

72.4

282.8

197.0

344.7

54.1

14.9

70.6

105.5

80.4

4.0

1.0

0.0

11.2

3.0

3,678.3

328.5

304.3

759.9

904.3

306.1

219.9

103.5

84.6

413.9

253.3

24%

32%

27%

28%

23%

8%

20%

22%

14%

29%

21%

PA/NP/CNM

67%

51%

68%

62%

66%

65%

78%

77%

86%

68%

78%

Other CSPa

9%

16%

5%

9%

12%

26%

2%

1%

0%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

2.8

1.6

2.5

2.2

2.9

7.9

4.0

3.5

6.0

2.4

3.7

FTEs and FP Encounters
Number of CSP FTEs
Physician
PA/NP/CNM
Other CSPa
Total
Distribution of CSP FTEs
Physician

Total
Midlevel to Physician FTEb
Number of FP Encounters
With CSP

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

3%

1%

3,602,064

194,041

406,873

561,497

724,718

340,333

320,095

132,608

132,798

645,785

143,316

With other

1,071,605

10,548

39,100

75,234

390,455

128,010

211,145

65,298

47,308

85,120

19,387

Total

4,673,669

204,589

445,973

636,731

1,115,173

468,343

531,240

197,906

180,106

730,905

162,703

77%

95%

91%

88%

65%

73%

60%

67%

74%

88%

88%

Distribution of FP Encounters
With CSP
With other
Total
FP Encounters per User
With CSP
With other
Total
CSP Encounters per CSP FTE

23%

5%

9%

12%

35%

27%

40%

33%

26%

12%

12%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

1.2

1.3

1.3

1.5

1.1

1.2

1.0

1.2

1.3

1.0

1.2

0.3

0.1

0.1

0.2

0.6

0.4

0.7

0.6

0.5

0.1

0.2

1.5

1.4

1.4

1.7

1.7

1.6

1.7

1.8

1.7

1.1

1.3

979

591

1,337

739

801

1,112

1,456

1,281

1,570

1,560

566

51

CNM=certified nurse midwife. CSP=clinical services provider. FP=family planning. FTE=full-time equivalent. NP=nurse practitioner. PA=physician assistant.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
a
Other CSPs are registered nurses with an expanded scope of practice who are trained and permitted by state-specific regulations to perform all aspects of the user (male and
female) physical assessments recommended for contraceptive, related preventive health, and basic infertility care.
b
Midlevel providers include physician assistants, nurse practitioners, and certified nurse midwives.

Selected Guidance for Reporting Project Revenue in FPAR Table 14
In FPAR Table 14, grantees report the revenue received
(i.e., actual cash receipts or drawdown amounts) during the
reporting period from various funding sources that support
activities within the scope of the grantee’s Title X services
grant, even if the funds were not expended during the
reporting period. Table 14 excludes the monetary value of
in-kind contributions. Sources of revenue include the
following:

Medicare/Title XVIII—Grantees report the amount
received from Medicare, regardless of whether the
reimbursement was paid directly by Medicare or through a
fiscal intermediary or an HMO. For clients enrolled in a
capitated Medicare program (i.e., where the grantee has a
contract with a private plan like Blue Cross), the payer is
Medicare, even though the actual payment may come
from Blue Cross.

Title X Grant—Refers to the amount received from the
Title X Section 1001 family planning services grant, including
revenue received from other Title X special initiatives (e.g.,
HIV integration).

Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP)—
Grantees report the amount received from CHIP.
Other Public Health Insurance—Grantees report the
amount received from other federal, state, or local
government health insurance programs. Other public
health insurance programs include state or local
government programs that provide a broad set of benefits
and public-paid or public-subsidized private insurance
programs.

Payment for Services—Refers to funds collected directly
from clients and revenues received (i.e., reimbursed) from
public and private third-party payers for services provided
within the scope of the grantee’s Title X project.
■

■

Total Client Collections/Self-Pay (“Client Fees”)—
Grantees report the amount in fees collected directly from
clients.
Third-Party Payers—Grantees report revenue received
from public and private third-party payers. Third-party
payer revenue reported as “prepaid” (capitated) is from
managed care arrangements (e.g., capitated Medicare,
Medicaid, and private managed care contracts).
Third-party payer revenue reported as “not prepaid” is
received after the date of service, even under managed
care arrangements. Third-party payer sources include:
Medicaid/Title XIX—Grantees report the amount
received from Medicaid (federal and state shares),
regardless of whether the reimbursement was paid
directly by Medicaid or through a fiscal intermediary or a
health maintenance organization (HMO). The Medicaid
amount includes revenue (federal and state shares) from
Medicaid family planning eligibility expansions (waivers or
State Plan Amendments).

Private Health Insurance—Grantees report the amount
received from private third-party health insurance plans,
which include plans obtained through an employer, union,
or direct purchase that provide a broad set of primary
medical care benefits for the enrolled individual
(beneficiary or dependent). Private health insurance
includes coverage purchased for public employees or
retirees or military personnel and their dependents (e.g.,
TRICARE or CHAMPVA).
Other Revenue—Grantees report the amounts received
from various other sources, including
■

Maternal and Child Health Block Grants (Title V)

■

Social Services Block Grants (Title XX)

■

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)

■

Local government sources (includes county and city
grants or contracts)

■

State government sources (includes grants or contracts)

■

Bureau of Primary Health Care grants (e.g., Section 330)

■

Private and client donations

■

Other public or private revenues.

Note: For detailed reporting guidance, please refer to the Title X Family Planning Annual Report: Forms and Instructions (Reissued
October 2016), pp. 47–49.5

52

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

8 Project Revenue
REVENUE
In 2019, Title X grantees reported total program revenue of over $1.0 billion to support the
delivery of Title X-funded family planning and related preventive health care. The two largest
sources of revenue—Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP)
combined ($370.9 million) and Title X ($229.0 million)—accounted for 36% and 22%,
respectively, of total revenue. Revenue from state governments ($110.0 million), private
third-party payers ($107.5 million), client service fees ($40.1 million), and local governments
($30.1 million) each accounted for 3% to 11% of total revenue, while all other sources each
contributed 2% or less (Exhibit 31).

Title X Services Grant
Revenue from Title X accounted for 22% ($229.0 million) of total national revenue and
between 13% and 36% of total regional revenue. Title X was the largest source of revenue in
four regions and the second largest source after Medicaid in four others (Exhibits 32 and 33).

Payment for Services: Client Fees
Revenue from client service fees accounted for 4% ($40.1 million) of total revenue and
between 1% and 9% of total regional revenue (Exhibits 32 and 33).

Payment for Services: Third-Party Payers
In 2019, revenue from third-party payers was 48% ($498.7 million) of total revenue, with
Medicaid/CHIP accounting for most (74%) of this amount.
Medicaid and CHIP. Medicaid revenue (federal and state shares) accounted for 36%
($369.5 million) of total revenue, and separately reported CHIP revenue accounted for less
than 0.5% ($1.4 million) of total revenue. Together, these two sources totaled $370.9 million,
or 36% of total 2019 revenue.
By region, Medicaid and CHIP revenue combined accounted for 13% to 61% of total regional
revenue, and Medicaid was the largest revenue source (27% to 61%) in six regions
(Exhibits 32 and 33). In 24 states, grantees included revenue from federally approved
Medicaid family planning eligibility expansions in the amount they reported for Medicaid.
See the Table 14 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C) for a list of
these states.
Medicare and Other Public. Revenue from Medicare ($8.0 million) and other public
third-party payers ($12.3 million) together accounted for 2% of total national revenue. By
region, the share of revenue from Medicare and other public third-party payers ranged from
less than 0.5% to 9% (Exhibits 32 and 33).
Private. Revenue from private third-party payers ($107.5 million) accounted for 10% of total
national revenue and between 6% and 24% of total regional revenue. Private third-party payer

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

53

revenue was the second or third most important revenue source in seven regions
(Exhibits 32 and 33).

Other Revenue
Block Grants and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF). Revenue from the
Title V Maternal and Child Health (MCH) block grant ($17.0 million), the Title XX Social
Services block grant ($6.1 million), and TANF ($6.1 million) each accounted for 1% to 2% of
total national revenue. By region, the share of total regional revenue from block grants (MCH
or Social Services) or TANF ranged from 0% to 4%, with several regions reporting no
revenue from either block grants or TANF (Exhibits 32 and 33).
State Governments. State government revenue accounted for 11% ($110.0 million) of total
national revenue and from 1% to 27% of total regional revenue. State government revenue
was the second largest source of regional revenue in two regions (Exhibits 32 and 33).
Local Governments. Local government revenue accounted for 3% ($30.1 million) of total
national revenue and from less than 0.5% to 10% of total regional revenue
(Exhibits 32 and 33).
Bureau of Primary Health Care (BPHC). Revenue from the Health Resources Services
Administration, BPHC accounted for 1% ($15.5 million) of total national revenue. Across
regions, BPHC revenue ranged from 0% to 7% of total regional revenue, with one region
reporting no BPHC revenue (Exhibits 32 and 33).
All Other Revenue. Finally, 8% ($83.8 million) of total revenue came from a combination of
all other public and private sources not listed separately in Table 14. Revenue from other
sources ranged from 2% to 17% of total regional revenue (Exhibits 32 and 33). See the
Table 14 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C) for a list of other
revenue sources.

Revenue per User and Encounter
On average, in 2019, grantees reported $335 in program revenue per family planning user
served and $222 per family planning encounter. By region, revenue per user ranged from
$226 to $464, and revenue per encounter ranged from $155 to $336 (Exhibit 32).

54

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 31. Amount and distribution of Title X project revenues, by revenue source: 2019 (Source: FPAR
Table 14)
Revenue Source

Amount

Distribution

$229,031,074

22%

Payment for Services
Client fees

$40,051,795

4%

Third-party payers
Medicaidb

$369,512,175

36%

Medicare

$8,023,568

1%

Children’s Health Insurance Program

$1,389,873

0%†

$12,299,248

1%

Private

$107,498,387

10%

Subtotal

$538,775,046

52%

$16,956,909

2%

Social Services block grant

$6,105,713

1%

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families

$6,077,922

1%

State government

$109,977,858

11%

Local government

$30,059,604

3%

Bureau of Primary Health Care

$15,487,598

1%

Otherc

$83,828,526

8%

$268,494,130

26%

$1,036,300,250

100%

Title X

a

Other public

Other Revenue
Maternal and Child Health block grant

Subtotal
Total Revenue
Total Revenue per User

$335

—

Total Revenue per Encounter

$222

—

— Not applicable.
Notes: Unless otherwise noted, revenue is shown in actual dollars (unadjusted) for each year. Due to rounding, percentages may
not sum to 100%.
a
Prepaid and not prepaid.
b
Includes revenue from federally approved Medicaid family planning eligibility expansions in 24 states in all 10 HHS regions.
See Table 14 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C) for a list of states by region.
c
See Table 14 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C) for a list of the types of revenue reported as
“other.”
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

55

56

Exhibit 32. Amount of Title X project revenues, by revenue source and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 14)
Region I
($)

Region II
($)

Region III
($)

Region IV
($)

Region V
($)

Region VI
($)

Region VII
($)

Region VIII
($)

Region IX
($)

Region X
($)

$229,031,074

$9,615,110

$17,462,293

$23,978,812

$54,930,215

$31,211,536

$30,113,470

$13,042,095

$10,669,156

$31,252,005

$6,756,382

$40,051,795

$1,389,725

$4,926,376

$4,308,780

$7,860,329

$6,897,798

$1,340,479

$2,000,576

$3,769,108

$5,407,479

$2,151,145

Third-party
Medicaidb

$369,512,175

$7,067,549

$36,618,826

$41,227,333

$55,980,366

$33,952,158

$16,378,925

$4,654,255

$6,419,173 $150,229,250

$16,984,340

Medicare

$8,023,568

$274,009

$451,176

$1,031,163

$1,707,429

$3,270,625

$394,753

$349,376

$101,094

Revenue Source
Title X
Payment for Services
Client fees

All Regions
($)

payersa

CHIP
Other publicc
Private
Subtotal

$392,293

$51,650

$1,389,873

$0

$424,602

$168,877

$482,536

$9,562

$104,464

$31,782

$168,050

$0

$0

$12,299,248

$1,145,153

$60,053

$1,646,461

$79,329

$166,447

$8,679,561

$193,862

$34,062

$158,014

$136,306

$107,498,387

$7,803,353

$16,490,638

$15,286,152

$10,680,679

$13,700,203

$6,871,327

$5,906,038

$6,964,459

$16,271,654

$7,523,884

$538,775,046 $17,679,789

$58,971,671

$63,668,766

$76,790,668

$57,996,793

$33,769,509

$13,135,889

$17,455,946 $172,458,690

$26,847,325

Other Revenue
MCH block grant

$16,956,909

$0

$5,332,852

$2,260,462

$3,205,984

$2,539,192

$1,524,513

$152,570

$173,311

$1,287,319

$480,706

SS block grant

$6,105,713

$1,074,608

$1,365,007

$2,608,761

$0

$995,897

$0

$0

$42,637

$18,803

$0

TANF

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

$6,077,922

$81,520

$0

$0

$3,145,329

$2,425,924

$418,715

$0

$6,434

$0

$0

State government

$109,977,858

$3,586,794

$34,398,542

$5,127,286

$18,218,899

$6,174,925

$28,015,434

$1,068,000

$3,276,544

$2,923,901

$7,187,533

Local government

$30,059,604

$6,200

$776,407

$226,613

$12,677,418

$3,888,041

$3,423,985

$301,824

$3,928,640

$2,030,915

$2,799,561

BPHC

$15,487,598

$167,873

$341,558

$53,796

$130,870

$8,189,911

$265,703

$2,590,436

$0

$3,725,174

$22,277

Otherd
Subtotal
Total Revenue

$83,828,526

$784,559

$9,569,132

$3,357,716

$4,049,431

$11,076,864

$4,947,737

$6,146,528

$4,268,320

$31,749,276

$7,878,963

$268,494,130

$5,701,554

$51,783,498

$13,634,634

$41,427,931

$35,290,754

$38,596,087

$10,259,358

$11,695,886

$41,735,388

$18,369,040

$173,148,814 $124,499,083 $102,479,066

$36,437,342

$39,820,988 $245,446,083

$51,972,747

$1,036,300,250 $32,996,453 $128,217,462 $101,282,212

Total Revenue per User

$335

$226

$416

$270

$267

$422

$319

$330

$380

$368

$430

Total Revenue per
Encounter

$222

$161

$288

$159

$155

$266

$193

$184

$221

$336

$319

BPHC=Bureau of Primary Health Care. CHIP=Children’s Health Insurance Program. MCH=Maternal and Child Health. SS=Social Services. TANF=Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
Note: Unless otherwise noted, revenue is shown in actual dollars (unadjusted) for each year.
a
b

c
d

Prepaid and not prepaid.
Includes revenue from federally approved Medicaid family planning eligibility expansions in 24 states in all 10 HHS regions. See Table 14 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes
(Appendix C) for a list of states by region.
“All Regions” and “Region VI” amounts for “Other Public” third-party payment for services include revenue from the Texas Women’s Health Program.
See Table 14 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C) for a list of the types of revenue reported as “other.”

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit 33. Distribution of Title X project revenues, by revenue source and region: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 14)
Revenue Source
Title X

All Regions

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

22%

29%

14%

24%

32%

25%

29%

36%

27%

13%

13%

4%

4%

4%

4%

5%

6%

1%

5%

9%

2%

4%

36%

21%

29%

41%

32%

27%

16%

13%

16%

61%

33%

Medicare

1%

1%

0%†

1%

1%

3%

0%†

1%

0%†

0%†

0%†

CHIP

0%†

0%

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%

0%

Other publicc

1%

3%

0%†

2%

0%†

0%†

8%

1%

0%†

0%†

0%†

Private

10%

24%

13%

15%

6%

11%

7%

16%

17%

7%

14%

Subtotal

52%

54%

46%

63%

44%

47%

33%

36%

44%

70%

52%

Other Revenue
MCH block grant

2%

0%

4%

2%

2%

2%

1%

0%†

0%†

1%

1%

SS block grant

1%

3%

1%

3%

0%

1%

0%

0%

0%†

0%†

0%

TANF

1%

0%†

0%

0%

2%

2%

0%†

0%

0%†

0%

0%

27%

5%

11%

5%

27%

3%

8%

1%

14%

1%

0%†

7%

3%

3%

1%

10%

1%

5%

Payment for Services
Client fees
Third-party payersa
Medicaidb

State government

11%

Local government

3%

11%
0%†

BPHC

1%

1%

0%†

0%†

0%†

7%

0%†

7%

0%

2%

Otherd

8%

2%

7%

3%

2%

9%

5%

17%

11%

13%

15%

Subtotal

26%

17%

40%

13%

24%

28%

38%

28%

29%

17%

35%

Total Revenue

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

0%†

BPHC=Bureau of Primary Health Care. CHIP=Children’s Health Insurance Program. MCH=Maternal and Child Health. SS=Social Services. TANF=Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100%.
a
Prepaid and not prepaid.
b
Includes revenue from federally approved Medicaid family planning eligibility expansions in 24 states in all 10 HHS regions. See Table 14 comments in the Field and
Methodological Notes (Appendix C) for a list of states by region.
c
“All Regions” and “Region VI” percentages for “Other Public” third-party payment for services include revenue from the Texas Women’s Health Program.
d
See Table 14 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C) for a list of the types of revenue reported as “other.”
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

57

Trends in Project Revenue 2009 vs. 2019
2019 vs. 2018. Comparing 2019 revenue data with those from 2018 shows that
inflation-adjusted (constant 2019 dollars)24 total revenue decreased 24% (by $322.3 million),
from $1.4 billion in 2018 to just over $1.0 billion in 2019. Revenue from all but two smaller
sources—other public third parties and TANF—decreased.
2019 vs. 2009. Comparing 2019 revenue data with those from 2009 shows that
inflation-adjusted (constant 2019 dollars)24 total revenue decreased 37% (by $597.6 million),
from $1.6 billion in 2009 to $1.0 billion in 2019. Decreases totaling $654.9 million from
several major sources were too large to offset modest increases ($57.3 million) in others
(Exhibits A–13a, A–13b, and A–13c).
Compared with 2009, revenue from each of the following sources in 2019 was lower
(Exhibits A–13a, A–13b, and A–13e):

▪ Combined Medicaid and CHIP revenue decreased 38%, or by $226.3 million, between
2009 ($597.2 million) and 2019 ($370.9 million).

▪ Title X revenue decreased 35%, or by $124.5 million, between 2009 ($353.5 million) and
2019 ($229.0 million).

▪ State government revenue decreased 46%, or by $94.1 million, between 2009
($204.1 million) and 2019 ($110.0 million) (not shown).

▪ Local government revenue decreased 73%, or by $82.3 million, between 2009
($112.3 million) and 2019 ($30.1 million) (not shown).

▪ Client service fees revenue decreased 63%, or by $67.4 million, between 2009
($107.4 million) and 2019 ($40.1 million) (not shown).

▪ Block grant revenue decreased 67%, or by $45.8 million, between 2009 ($68.8 million)
and 2019 ($23.1 million) (not shown).

▪ TANF revenue decreased 71%, or by $14.6 million, between 2009 ($20.7 million) and
2019 ($6.1 million) (not shown).

Compared with 2009, revenue from each of the following sources in 2019 was higher:

▪ Private third-party payer revenue increased 67%, or by $43.2 million, between 2009
($64.3 million) and 2019 ($107.5 million) (not shown).

▪ Medicare and other public third-party payer revenue increased 167%, or by

$12.7 million, between 2009 ($7.6 million) and 2019 ($20.3 million) (not shown).

▪ Revenue from multiple “other” sources increased 1%, or by $1.4 million, between 2009
($97.9 million) and 2019 ($99.3 million) (not shown).

Compared with 2009, the distribution of total revenue across most major sources in 2019 was
about the same. Noteworthy changes included a 6-point increase in the percentage of total
revenue from private third-party payers and a 3-point decrease in the percentage from client
service fees (see Exhibits A–14a, A–14b, and A–14c).

58

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

9 References
1. Title X of the Public Health Service Act, 42 U.S. Code 300 et seq. (1970).
Retrieved from https://opa.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/2020-07/title-x-statuteattachment-a_0.pdf
2. The Title X program requirements consist of the following two documents:
Compliance with statutory program integrity requirements (“Title X Final
Rule”) retrieved from https://opa.hhs.gov/grant-programs/title-x-servicegrants/title-x-statutes-regulations-and-legislative-mandates-0
Providing quality family planning services: Recommendations of CDC and the
U.S. Office of Population Affairs (“QFP”) and updates (2015 and 2017) to the
Recommendations retrieved from https://opa.hhs.gov/grant-programs/title-xservice-grants/about-title-x-service-grants/quality-family-planning
3. 42 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 59 Subpart A. (2020, March 4)
Project grants for family planning services. Retrieved from
https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=c1cbd72e13f7230f1e8328fa
52b57899&mc=true&node=sp42.1.59.a&rgn=div6
4. Office of Population Affairs. (2020). Title X funding history. Retrieved from
https://opa.hhs.gov/grant-programs/archive/title-x-program-funding-history
5. Office of Population Affairs. (2016). Title X Family Planning Annual Report:
Forms and instructions (reissued October 2016). Rockville, MD: U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary
for Health/Office, Office of Population Affairs. Retrieved from
https://opa.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/2020-07/fpar-forms-instructionsreissued-oct-2016.pdf
6. 45 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 75. (2016, October 1). Uniform
administrative requirements, cost principles, and audit requirements for HHS
awards. Retrieved from https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/retrieveECFR?gp=
1&SID=df3c54728d090168d3b2e780a6f6ca7c&ty=HTML&h=L&mc=true&n
=pt45.1.75&r=PART
7. Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health, Office of the Secretary,
Department of Health and Human Services. (2019). Compliance with Statutory
Program Integrity Requirements. Federal Register, 84(42): 7714-7791.
Accessed from https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2019-0304/pdf/2019-03461.pdf

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59

8. Napili, A and Elliot, V.L. (2020). Title X Family Planning Program: 2019
Final Rule. Congressional Research Service No. IF 11142. Accessed from
https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF11142
9. Office of Population Affairs. (2019). Fact Sheet: Final Title X Rule Detailing
Family Planning Grant Program. Accessed from https://opa.hhs.gov/grantprograms/title-x-service-grants/title-x-statutes-regulations-and-legislativemandates-4
10. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2019). 2019 poverty
guidelines, U.S. federal poverty guidelines used to determine financial
eligibility for certain federal programs. Retrieved from
https://aspe.hhs.gov/2019-poverty-guidelines
11. Cohen, R. A., Terlizzi, E. P., Martinez, M. E., & Cha, A.E. (2020). Health
insurance coverage: Early release of estimates from the National Health
Interview Survey, January-June 2019. Retrieved from
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhis/earlyrelease/insur202005-508.pdf
12. Office of Management and Budget. (1997). Revisions to the standards for the
classification of federal data on race and ethnicity, October 30, 1997. Federal
Register Notice. Retrieved from https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-1997-1030/pdf/97-28653.pdf
13. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2003). Guidance to federal
financial assistance recipients regarding Title VI prohibition against national
origin discrimination affecting limited English proficient persons (“Revised
HHS LEP guidance”). Federal Register, 68(153), 47311–47323. Retrieved
from https://www.hhs.gov/ocr/civilrights/resources/specialtopics/lep/
policyguidancedocument.html
14. Kennedy, K. I., & Goldsmith, C. (2018). Contraception after pregnancy. In R.
A. Hatcher, A. L. Nelson, J. Trussell, C. Cwiak, P. Cason, M. S. Policar, A. R.
A. Aiken, J. Marrazzo, & D. Kowal (Eds.), Contraceptive technology (21st ed.,
pp. 511–542). New York, NY: Ardent Media.
15. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2020). Sexual risk behaviors can
lead to HIV, STDs & teen pregnancy. Retrieved from
https://www.cdc.gov/healthyyouth/sexualbehaviors/

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16. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Office of Population
Affairs. (2014). Providing quality family planning services: Recommendations
of CDC and the U.S. Office of Population Affairs. MMWR, 63(4), 1–54.
Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/rr/rr6304.pdf. For the 2015
update to the Recommendations, see Gavin, L., & Pazol, K. (2016). Update:
Providing quality family planning services–Recommendations from CDC and
the U.S. Office of Population Affairs, 2015. MMWR, 65(9), 231–234.
Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/65/wr/pdfs/
mm6509a3.pdf. For the 2017 update to the Recommendations, see Gavin, L.,
Pazol, K., & Ahrens, K. (2017). Update: Providing quality family planning
services–Recommendations from CDC and the U.S. Office of Population
Affairs, 2017. MMWR, 66(50), 1383–1385. Retrieved from
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/66/wr/pdfs/mm6650a4-H.pdf
17. Office of Population Affairs. (2019). Performance measures. Retrieved from
https://opa.hhs.gov/evaluation-research/title-x-services-research/contraceptivecare-measures
18. Trussell, J. (2011). Chapter 26: Contraceptive: Efficacy. In R. A. Hatcher,
J. Trussell, A. L. Nelson, W. Cates, D. Kowal, & M. S. Policar (Eds.),
Contraceptive technology (20th ed.). New York, NY: Ardent Media, Inc.
19. Nayar, R., & Wilbur, D. C. (2015). The Pap test and Bethesda 2014. Acta
Cytologica 29, 121–132. Retrieved from https://www.karger.com/Article/
Pdf/381842
20. National Cancer Institute. (2020). NCI dictionary of cancer terms. Retrieved
from https://www.cancer.gov/publications/dictionaries/cancer-terms
21. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2019). Reported STDs in the
United States, 2018, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/nchhstp/newsroom/docs/factsheets/STDTrends-508.pdf
22. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2015). Sexually transmitted
diseases treatment guidelines, 2015. MMWR, 64(RR-3), 1–137. Retrieved from
https://www.cdc.gov/std/tg2015/tg-2015-print.pdf and Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. (2016). Screening recommendations and
considerations referenced in treatment guidelines and original sources.
Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/std/tg2015/screeningrecommendations.htm
23. U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. (2014). Gonorrhea and chlamydia:
Screening. Retrieved from https://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/
Page/Document/RecommendationStatementFinal/chlamydia-and-gonorrheascreening

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24. U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). (n.d.). Consumer
price index: Series ID. CUUR0000SAM. Retrieved from
https://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/srgate
25. Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. (2020, August 17). Status of state action
on the Medicaid expansion decision. Retrieved from
https://www.kff.org/health-reform/state-indicator/state-activity-aroundexpanding-medicaid-under-the-affordable-careact/?currentTimeframe=0&sortModel=%7B%22colId%
22:%22Location%22,%22sort%22:%22asc%22%7D
26. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (2018). Skyla: Highlights of
prescribing information. Retrieved from http://labeling.bayerhealthcare.com/
html/products/pi/Skyla_PI.pdf#IUDEfficacy
27. Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (2020). Important safety information
about Kyleena. Retrieved from https://hcp.kyleena-us.com/aboutkyleena/efficacy/
28. Allergan USA, Inc. (2019). Liletta: Highlights of prescribing information.
Retrieved from https://www.allergan.com/assets/pdf/lilettashi_pi
29. Hatcher, R. A. (2018). Contraceptive technology (21st edition) (D. Kowal, R.
A. Hatcher, A. L. Nelson, J. Trussell, C. Cwiak, P. Cason, M. S. Policar, A. B.
Edelman, A. R. A. Aiken, & J. M. Marrazzo, Eds.). Managing Contraception,
LLC. Retrieved from https://books.google.com/books/about/Contraceptive_
Technology_21st_Edition.html?id=qsz8twEACAAJ

62

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Appendix A
National Trend Exhibits

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

A-1

A-2

Exhibit A–1a.
Region

Number of Title X-funded grantees, subrecipients, and service sites, by region and year: 2009–2019
2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

10
7
9
10
11
8
5
6
16
7
89

10
7
9
10
12
6
5
6
16
8
89

11
7
9
10
12
6
5
6
17
8
91

11
7
9
13
11
6
5
6
17
8
93

11
6
10
13
11
7
5
6
18
8
95

12
6
10
14
10
6
5
6
17
8
94

11
6
10
10
12
6
5
6
17
8
91

11
6
10
9
11
7
5
6
18
8
91

11
6
10
9
11
6
5
6
17
8
89

12
8
12
11
13
8
5
6
18
6
99

10
8
12
12
12
9
6
6
19
6
100

Subrecipients
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
Total

69
89
222
190
136
94
107
73
116
61
1,157

71
82
218
188
130
90
105
74
104
60
1,122

72
80
230
183
135
79
106
74
121
62
1,142

67
75
265
184
129
78
101
75
113
61
1,148

66
71
271
214
133
90
97
74
105
60
1,181

67
70
258
253
120
45
93
74
95
59
1,134

71
70
316
226
122
47
94
74
102
59
1,181

69
68
223
281
118
41
92
68
99
58
1,117

68
68
225
277
113
39
91
69
85
56
1,091

75
72
218
267
131
48
93
68
89
67
1,128

61
68
173
271
134
46
92
62
86
67
1,060

Service Sites
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
Total

230
296
656
1,104
373
588
296
185
501
286
4,515

221
272
641
1,091
371
580
289
184
495
245
4,389

228
263
639
1,076
392
553
267
179
539
246
4,382

238
253
633
1,044
364
521
251
185
474
226
4,189

225
256
627
1,019
362
571
242
182
460
224
4,168

233
251
615
1,183
340
442
223
182
441
217
4,127

224
247
648
936
383
457
218
177
461
200
3,951

225
244
640
914
374
425
221
180
469
206
3,898

221
244
653
912
365
415
210
162
465
211
3,858

242
241
626
900
388
468
202
170
478
239
3,954

214
237
614
910
394
466
197
157
391
245
3,825

Grantees
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
Total

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–1b.

Distribution of Title X-funded grantees, subrecipients, and service sites, by region and year: 2009–2019

Region

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

Grantees
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
Total

11%
8%
10%
11%
12%
9%
6%
7%
18%
8%
100%

11%
8%
10%
11%
13%
7%
6%
7%
18%
9%
100%

12%
8%
10%
11%
13%
7%
5%
7%
19%
9%
100%

12%
8%
10%
14%
12%
6%
5%
6%
18%
9%
100%

12%
6%
11%
14%
12%
7%
5%
6%
19%
8%
100%

13%
6%
11%
15%
11%
6%
5%
6%
18%
9%
100%

12%
7%
11%
11%
13%
7%
5%
7%
19%
9%
100%

12%
7%
11%
10%
12%
8%
5%
7%
20%
9%
100%

12%
7%
11%
10%
12%
7%
6%
7%
19%
9%
100%

12%
8%
12%
11%
13%
8%
5%
6%
18%
6%
100%

10%
8%
12%
12%
12%
9%
6%
6%
19%
6%
100%

Subrecipients
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
Total

6%
8%
19%
16%
12%
8%
9%
6%
10%
5%
100%

6%
7%
19%
17%
12%
8%
9%
7%
9%
5%
100%

6%
7%
20%
16%
12%
7%
9%
6%
11%
5%
100%

6%
7%
23%
16%
11%
7%
9%
7%
10%
5%
100%

6%
6%
23%
18%
11%
8%
8%
6%
9%
5%
100%

6%
6%
23%
22%
11%
4%
8%
7%
8%
5%
100%

6%
6%
27%
19%
10%
4%
8%
6%
9%
5%
100%

6%
6%
20%
25%
11%
4%
8%
6%
9%
5%
100%

6%
6%
21%
25%
10%
4%
8%
6%
8%
5%
100%

7%
6%
19%
24%
12%
4%
8%
6%
8%
6%
100%

6%
6%
16%
26%
13%
4%
9%
6%
8%
6%
100%

Service Sites
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
Total

5%
7%
15%
24%
8%
13%
7%
4%
11%
6%
100%

5%
6%
15%
25%
8%
13%
7%
4%
11%
6%
100%

5%
6%
15%
25%
9%
13%
6%
4%
12%
6%
100%

6%
6%
15%
25%
9%
12%
6%
4%
11%
5%
100%

5%
6%
15%
24%
9%
14%
6%
4%
11%
5%
100%

6%
6%
15%
29%
8%
11%
5%
4%
11%
5%
100%

6%
6%
16%
24%
10%
12%
6%
4%
12%
5%
100%

6%
6%
16%
23%
10%
11%
6%
5%
12%
5%
100%

6%
6%
17%
24%
9%
11%
5%
4%
12%
5%
100%

6%
6%
16%
23%
10%
12%
5%
4%
12%
6%
100%

6%
6%
16%
24%
10%
12%
5%
4%
10%
6%
100%

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

A-3

Number of Title X-funded service sites and users per service site, by year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibits A-1a and A-1b.

2,000

5,000
4,515

4,389

4,382

4,189

4,168

4,127

Number of service sites

4,000

3,000

3,951

3,898

3,858

3,954

3,825
1,500

1,149

1,190

1,146

1,137

1,094

1,001

1,017

1,028

1,038

996
809

1,000

2,000

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

500

1,000

0

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

Number of service sites

2014

2015

2016

2017

Number of users per site

2018

2019

0

Number of users per site

A-4

Exhibit A–1c.

This page intentionally left blank.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

A-5

A-6

Exhibit A–2a.
Region

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by region and year: 2009–2019
2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

I

199,779

198,962

192,252

195,264

182,684

184,005

184,389

183,383

194,952

201,188

145,737

II

497,614

499,231

493,369

488,872

470,836

429,409

431,060

428,146

429,091

436,971

308,031

III

592,475

584,167

564,163

550,051

520,403

468,157

432,418

477,585

464,216

472,832

374,499

IV

1,010,012

989,770

940,931

907,020

852,400

770,501

660,156

669,743

677,146

642,224

648,599

V

492,741

492,359

472,062

434,587

401,935

377,552

390,446

390,541

391,901

403,080

295,108

VI

512,019

512,868

475,863

350,164

372,296

298,294

346,670

334,933

350,646

334,107

321,395

VII

209,350

214,032

205,167

186,716

167,286

148,405

140,055

135,907

120,759

116,928

110,363

VIII

160,919

176,892

169,311

163,068

152,248

137,509

131,031

124,021

126,922

131,148

104,814

IX

1,294,974

1,352,569

1,314,270

1,309,439

1,269,252

1,149,781

1,146,183

1,102,836

1,093,827

1,044,056

666,147

X

216,384

204,012

194,323

178,616

168,484

165,670

155,607

160,457

154,786

157,215

120,973

Total

5,186,267

5,224,862

5,021,711

4,763,797

4,557,824

4,129,283

4,018,015

4,007,552

4,004,246

3,939,749

3,095,666

Female

4,811,691

4,822,570

4,635,195

4,378,744

4,184,587

3,764,622

3,607,353

3,553,018

3,541,235

3,446,504

2,690,552

374,576

402,292

386,516

385,053

373,237

364,661

410,662

454,534

463,011

493,245

405,114

I

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

5%

5%

5%

5%

5%

II

10%

10%

10%

10%

10%

10%

11%

11%

11%

11%

10%

III

11%

11%

11%

12%

11%

11%

11%

12%

12%

12%

12%

IV

19%

19%

19%

19%

19%

19%

16%

17%

17%

16%

21%

V

10%

9%

9%

9%

9%

9%

10%

10%

10%

10%

10%

VI

10%

10%

9%

7%

8%

7%

9%

8%

9%

8%

10%

VII

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

3%

3%

3%

3%

4%

VIII

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

IX

25%

26%

26%

27%

28%

28%

29%

28%

27%

27%

22%

X

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

93%

92%

92%

92%

92%

91%

90%

89%

88%

87%

87%

7%

8%

8%

8%

8%

9%

10%

11%

12%

13%

13%

Male

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Total
Female
Male

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–2b.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by region and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-2a.

2019

5%

2018

5%

11%

2017

5%

11%

12%

17%

10%

2016

5%

11%

12%

17%

10%

2015

5%

11%

11%

2014

4%

10%

11%

19%

9%

2013

4%

10%

11%

19%

9%

2012

4%

10%

12%

19%

2011

4%

10%

11%

19%

9%

9%

2010

4%

10%

11%

19%

9%

10%

2009

4%

10%

11%

0%

12%

10%

12%

16%

16%

19%

27%

4% 3.94 million

9%

3% 3%

27%

4% 4.00 million

8%

3% 3%

28%

4% 4.01 million

3% 3%

29%

4% 4.02 million

7%

4% 3%

28%

4% 4.13 million

8%

4% 3%

28%

4% 4.56 million

7%

4% 3%

27%

4% 4.76 million

4% 3%

26%

4% 5.02 million

4% 3%

26%

4% 5.22 million

4% 3%

25%

4% 5.19 million

9%

9%

10%

10%

Region I

Region II

Region III

Region IV

Region V

Region VI

Region VII

Region VIII

Region IX

Region X

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

4% 3.10 million

3% 3%

8%

10%

10%

22%

4% 3%

10%

10%

21%

100%

A-7

A-8

Exhibit A–3a.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by age and year: 2009–2019

Age Group (Years)

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

Under 15

74,287

73,383

59,351

53,012

45,633

45,863

46,045

58,649

49,060

53,998

47,836

15 to 17

502,226

466,284

423,702

368,965

327,152

298,839

280,785

275,499

271,429

264,389

206,305

18 to 19

647,432

616,709

560,848

505,356

454,044

404,197

379,710

373,253

373,235

363,399

276,270

20 to 24

1,577,051

1,600,833

1,508,215

1,405,487

1,320,188

1,169,948

1,091,549

1,043,071

1,013,943

970,356

724,585

25 to 29

1,037,776

1,071,999

1,058,256

1,023,503

999,476

912,130

887,225

876,921

877,588

841,832

629,510

30 to 34

578,031

607,257

621,119

616,259

622,258

573,010

570,708

572,573

580,833

573,004

460,181

35 to 39

353,712

359,749

358,400

351,820

355,877

331,439

344,385

359,108

374,756

380,153

320,185

40 to 44

209,292

215,914

222,429

222,621

220,836

200,955

204,360

211,324

220,748

225,997

202,397

Over 44

206,460

212,734

209,391

216,774

212,360

192,902

213,248

237,154

242,654

266,621

228,397

5,186,267

5,224,862

5,021,711

4,763,797

4,557,824

4,129,283

4,018,015

4,007,552

4,004,246

3,939,749

3,095,666

Under 15

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

2%

15 to 17

10%

9%

8%

8%

7%

7%

7%

7%

7%

7%

7%

18 to 19

12%

12%

11%

11%

10%

10%

9%

9%

9%

9%

9%

20 to 24

30%

31%

30%

30%

29%

28%

27%

26%

25%

25%

23%

25 to 29

20%

21%

21%

21%

22%

22%

22%

22%

22%

21%

20%

30 to 34

11%

12%

12%

13%

14%

14%

14%

14%

15%

15%

15%

35 to 39

7%

7%

7%

7%

8%

8%

9%

9%

9%

10%

10%

40 to 44

4%

4%

4%

5%

5%

5%

5%

5%

6%

6%

7%

Over 44

4%

4%

4%

5%

5%

5%

5%

6%

6%

7%

7%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Total

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Total

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–3b.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by age and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-3a.

2019

15–17,
7%

18–19, 9%

2018

7%

9%

25%

2017

7%

9%

25%

2016

7%

9%

26%

2015

7%

9%

27%

2014

7%

10%

28%

22%

2013

7%

10%

29%

22%

2012

8%

2011

8%

2010

9%

2009

10%
0%

20–24, 23%

11%

25–29, 20%
21%

22%
22%

30%

<15

29%

6%

4.00 million

29%

6%

4.01 million

5%

4.02 million

27%

5%

4.13 million

26%

5%

4.56 million

5%

4.76 million

4%

5.02 million

23%

4%

5.22 million

22%

4%

5.19 million

28%

25%
24%

21%

30%

15–17

3.94 million

21%

31%

12%

7%

21%

30%

12%

3.10 million

30%

22%

11%

7%

30–44, 32%

18–19

20%

20–24

25–29

30–44

>44

100%

Notes: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%, and percentages in combined or aggregated categories may not match the sum of the individual percentages
that are included in the aggregated categories. The percentage of users under 15 is 1% each year from 2009 through 2019.

A-9

A-10

Exhibit A–4a.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by race and year: 2009–2019

Race

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

American Indian/Alaska Native

39,220

44,899

43,204

45,785

34,051

29,327

30,526

33,467

35,587

38,097

29,373

150,847

136,958

134,345

136,412

135,567

128,797

131,676

135,555

143,215

139,084

89,045

1,015,013

1,028,991

986,803

969,776

939,941

863,136

857,659

859,886

869,574

861,707

732,825

73,559

65,662

70,929

70,519

52,263

39,266

40,941

35,479

31,019

29,545

22,327

3,054,226

3,015,861

2,864,253

2,664,736

2,530,204

2,238,847

2,142,835

2,174,833

2,150,480

2,076,854

1,677,624

More than one race

169,044

261,397

250,825

248,590

191,871

153,907

136,043

142,564

144,397

151,281

110,372

Unknown/not reported

684,358

671,094

671,352

627,979

673,927

676,003

678,335

625,768

629,974

643,181

434,100

5,186,267

5,224,862

5,021,711

4,763,797

4,557,824

4,129,283

4,018,015

4,007,552

4,004,246

3,939,749

3,095,666

American Indian/Alaska Native

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

Asian

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

4%

4%

3%

20%

20%

20%

20%

21%

21%

21%

21%

22%

22%

24%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

59%

58%

57%

56%

56%

54%

53%

54%

54%

53%

54%

3%

5%

5%

5%

4%

4%

3%

4%

4%

4%

4%

13%

13%

13%

13%

15%

16%

17%

16%

16%

16%

14%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Asian
Black/African American
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander
White

Total All Users

Black/African American

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander
White
More than one race
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–4b.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by race and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-4a.

White, 54%

2019

Black, 24%

Other, 8% Unknown, 14%

3.10 million

22%

9%

16%

3.94 million

2018

53%

2017

54%

22%

9%

16%

4.00 million

2016

54%

21%

9%

16%

4.01 million

2015

53%

2014

54%

21%
21%

8%

17%

4.02 million

9%

16%

4.13 million

2013

56%

21%

9%

2012

56%

20%

11%

13%

4.76 million

2011

57%

10%

13%

5.02 million

2010

58%

10%

13%

5.22 million

8%

13%

5.19 million

20%
20%

59%

2009
0%

White

20%

Black

Other

Unknown

15%

4.56 million

100%

Notes: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%, and percentages in combined or aggregated categories may not match the sum of the individual percentages
that are included in the aggregated categories. The Other race category includes users who self-identified as American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Native Hawaiian or Other
Pacific Islander, and more than one race.

A-11

A-12

Exhibit A–5a.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by Hispanic or Latino ethnicity (all races) and year: 2009–2019

Ethnicity

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

Hispanic or Latino

1,447,422

1,493,007

1,451,215

1,349,528

1,344,601

1,237,652

1,276,765

1,269,988

1,324,817

1,306,370

1,036,801

Not Hispanic or Latino

3,618,344

3,618,285

3,416,314

3,277,828

3,093,545

2,786,005

2,617,597

2,600,742

2,553,416

2,453,448

1,920,228

Unknown/not reported

120,501

113,570

154,182

136,441

119,678

105,626

123,653

136,822

126,013

179,931

138,637

5,186,267

5,224,862

5,021,711

4,763,797

4,557,824

4,129,283

4,018,015

4,007,552

4,004,246

3,939,749

3,095,666

Hispanic or Latino

28%

29%

29%

28%

30%

30%

32%

32%

33%

33%

33%

Not Hispanic or Latino

70%

69%

68%

69%

68%

67%

65%

65%

64%

62%

62%

Unknown/not reported

2%

2%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

5%

4%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Total All Users

Total All Users

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–5b.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by Hispanic or Latino ethnicity (all races) and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-5a.

2019

Not Hispanic/Latino, 62%

Hispanic/Latino, 33%

3.10 million

2018

62%

33%

3.94 million

2017

64%

33%

4.00 million

2016

65%

32%

4.01 million

2015

65%

32%

4.02 million

2014

67%

30%

4.13 million

2013

68%

30%

4.56 million

2012

69%

28%

4.76 million

2011

68%

29%

5.02 million

2010

69%

29%

5.22 million

2009

70%

28%

5.19 million

0%

100%

Not Hispanic/Latino
Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

Hispanic/Latino

Unknown

A-13

A-14

Exhibit A–6a.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by Hispanic or Latino ethnicity, race, and year: 2009–2019

Ethnicity and Race

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Not Hispanic or Latino
Asian

139,831

126,413

121,777

124,790

128,015

119,454

122,310

124,233

130,688

128,678

80,588

969,690

986,409

939,143

917,539

890,133

816,061

811,244

806,815

806,970

796,450

679,361

2,227,867

2,214,680

2,060,244

1,951,410

1,812,924

1,583,629

1,439,284

1,445,887

1,394,432

1,311,047

1,004,060

280,956

290,783

295,150

284,089

262,473

266,861

244,759

223,807

221,326

217,273

156,219

1,447,422

1,493,007

1,451,215

1,349,528

1,344,601

1,237,652

1,276,765

1,269,988

1,324,817

1,306,370

1,036,801

120,501

113,570

154,182

136,441

119,678

105,626

123,653

136,822

126,013

179,931

138,637

5,186,267

5,224,862

5,021,711

4,763,797

4,557,824

4,129,283

4,018,015

4,007,552

4,004,246

3,939,749

3,095,666

3%

2%

2%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

Black or African American

19%

19%

19%

19%

20%

20%

20%

20%

20%

20%

22%

White

43%

42%

41%

41%

40%

38%

36%

36%

35%

33%

32%

Other/unknown

5%

6%

6%

6%

6%

6%

6%

6%

6%

6%

5%

Hispanic or Latino
All races

28%

29%

29%

28%

30%

30%

32%

32%

33%

33%

33%

2%

2%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

5%

4%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Black or African American
White
Other/unknown
Hispanic or Latino
All races
Unknown/Not Reported
Total All Users
Not Hispanic or Latino
Asian

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Unknown/Not Reported
Total All Users

2019

Notes: The Not Hispanic or Latino “Other/Unknown” category includes users who self-identified as not Hispanic or Latino and for whom either race was unknown/not reported or the
user self-identified as one of the following: Asian, American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, or more than one race. Due to rounding,
percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–6b.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by Hispanic or Latino ethnicity, race, and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-6a.

2019

NH White, 32%

NH Black, 22%

8%

Hispanic (all races), 33%

3.10 million

2018

33%

20%

9%

33%

3.94 million

2017

9%

20%

35%

33%

4.00 million

2016

36%

20%

9%

32%

4.01 million

2015

36%

20%

9%

32%

4.02 million

2014

38%

2013

40%

9%

20%
20%

2012

41%

19%

2011

41%

19%

9%
9%
8%

30%

4.13 million

30%

4.56 million

28%

4.76 million

29%

5.02 million

2010

42%

19%

8%

29%

5.22 million

2009

43%

19%

8%

28%

5.19 million

0%

100%

NH White

NH Black

NH Other/Unknown

Hispanic (all races)

Unknown

NH=Not Hispanic or Latino.
Notes: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%, and percentages in combined or aggregated categories may not match the sum of the individual percentages
that are included in the aggregated categories. The “NH Other/Unknown” category includes users who self-identified as not Hispanic or Latino and for whom either race was
unknown/not reported or the user self-identified as one of the following: Asian, American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, or more than one race.
The “Unknown” category includes users with unknown or not reported Hispanic or Latino ethnicity.

A-15

A-16

Exhibit A–7a.
Income Level

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by income level and year: 2009–2019
2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

3,632,506

3,618,813

3,466,912

3,382,089

3,211,380

2,840,650

2,653,841

2,564,992

2,665,911

2,542,526

1,968,876

101% to 150%

785,090

795,065

731,410

649,462

636,484

572,948

556,141

575,420

551,163

566,040

426,239

151% to 200%

277,103

281,294

269,478

247,490

245,805

234,425

238,420

252,273

257,155

277,321

211,586

201% to 250%

119,768

125,298

116,188

103,061

103,246

100,402

105,975

128,874

123,477

134,010

103,816

Over 250%

207,484

250,440

250,829

230,947

222,718

226,918

255,093

297,988

277,975

289,208

226,957

Unknown/not reported

164,316

153,952

186,894

150,748

138,191

153,940

208,545

188,005

128,565

130,644

158,192

5,186,267

5,224,862

5,021,711

4,763,797

4,557,824

4,129,283

4,018,015

4,007,552

4,004,246

3,939,749

3,095,666

Under 101%

70%

69%

69%

71%

70%

69%

66%

64%

67%

65%

64%

101% to 150%

15%

15%

15%

14%

14%

14%

14%

14%

14%

14%

14%

151% to 200%

5%

5%

5%

5%

5%

6%

6%

6%

6%

7%

7%

201% to 250%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

Over 250%

4%

5%

5%

5%

5%

5%

6%

7%

7%

7%

7%

Unknown/not reported

3%

3%

4%

3%

3%

4%

5%

5%

3%

3%

5%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

a

Under 101%

Total All Users

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Total All Users

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%, and percentages in combined or aggregated categories may not match the sum of individual percentages
included in the aggregated categories.
a
Title X-funded grantees and subrecipients report users’ family income as a percentage of poverty based on guidelines issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS). Each year, HHS announces updates to its poverty guidelines in the Federal Register and on the HHS Website at http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–7b.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by income level and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-7a.

2019

≤100%, 64%

2018

65%

2017

101%–150%, 14%

2016

6%

14%

6%

14%

66%

2014

6%

14%

64%

2015

7%

14%

67%

14%

69%

7%

7%

3.10 million

7%

3.94 million

7%

4.00 million

7%

4.01 million

6%

4.02 million

5%

6%

4.13 million

2013

70%

14%

5%

5%

4.56 million

2012

71%

14%

5%

5%

4.76 million

2011

69%

15%

2010

69%

15%

2009

70%

15%

5%
5%
5%

5%

5.02 million

5%

5.22 million

4%

5.19 million

0%

100%

≤100%

101%–150%

151%–200%

201%–250%

>250%

Unknown

Notes: Title X-funded grantees and subrecipients report users’ family income as a percentage of poverty based on guidelines issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS). Each year, HHS announces updates to its poverty guidelines in the Federal Register and on the HHS Website at http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/. Due to rounding,
percentages in each year may not sum to 100%, and percentages in combined or aggregated categories may not match the sum of the individual percentages that are included in
the aggregated categories.

A-17

A-18

Exhibit A–8a.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by primary health insurance status and year: 2009–2019

Primary Insurance

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

1,021,164

1,184,795

1,236,343

1,121,372

1,131,406

1,215,648

1,395,201

1,499,672

1,511,533

1,502,777

1,186,684

426,308

438,042

429,919

447,341

453,535

559,845

621,066

715,090

760,051

794,535

607,961

3,419,915

3,483,360

3,230,784

3,050,415

2,865,672

2,239,377

1,934,154

1,737,488

1,675,825

1,580,113

1,255,337

318,880

118,665

124,665

144,669

107,211

114,413

67,594

55,302

56,837

62,324

45,684

5,186,267

5,224,862

5,021,711

4,763,797

4,557,824

4,129,283

4,018,015

4,007,552

4,004,246

3,939,749

3,095,666

Public insurance

20%

23%

25%

24%

25%

29%

35%

37%

38%

38%

38%

Private insurance

8%

8%

9%

9%

10%

14%

15%

18%

19%

20%

20%

66%

67%

64%

64%

63%

54%

48%

43%

42%

40%

41%

6%

2%

2%

3%

2%

3%

2%

1%

1%

2%

1%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Public insurance
Private insurance
Uninsured
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

Uninsured
Unknown/not reported
Total All Users

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–8b.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by primary health insurance status and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-8a.

2019

Public insurance, 38%

Private insurance, 20%

Uninsured, 41%

3.10 million

2018

38%

20%

40%

3.94 million

2017

38%

2016

37%

2012

24%

2011

25%

10%
9%
9%

23%

2010

20%

2009

4.02 million

54%

14%

25%

2013

4.01 million

48%

15%

29%

2014

4.00 million

43%

18%

35%

2015

42%

19%

4.13 million

63%

4.56 million

64%

4.76 million

64%

5.02 million

8%

67%

8%

5.22 million

66%

0%

5.19 million
100%

Public insurance

Private insurance

Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.

Uninsured

Unknown/Not reported

A-19

A-20

Exhibit A–9a.

Number of all female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and year: 2009–2019

Primary Method

2009

Most Effectivea
Vasectomy
Sterilization

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

6,905

8,683

8,632

8,540

8,175

7,582

6,879

8,178

8,848

9,237

7,668

92,616

92,652

90,438

86,854

82,067

74,748

84,108

86,112

94,173

91,569

82,472

Hormonal implant

30,135

48,015

65,673

82,642

108,586

139,799

177,975

209,014

239,029

240,418

190,615

Intrauterine device

216,390

252,121

272,683

284,461

279,289

265,511

273,650

288,939

324,174

323,081

237,073

Moderately Effectivea
Hormonal injectionb
Vaginal ring

615,188

643,682

645,351

645,136

635,093

611,619

574,476

519,841

500,960

474,609

398,894

165,121

186,238

183,182

164,693

142,292

115,230

95,186

83,473

76,252

66,968

46,021

Contraceptive patch

106,266

93,499

89,795

83,145

78,547

69,469

49,010

47,030

48,256

46,384

32,714

1,696,319

1,684,201

1,534,684

1,409,300

1,316,671

1,135,950

1,000,062

946,383

894,128

823,992

598,304

12,278

4,402

3,390

4,116

8,245

2,379

1,660

2,130

2,219

1,652

877

737,991

787,329

838,131

745,265

692,678

578,139

572,607

559,356

547,129

533,079

385,950

4,635

5,944

5,939

3,722

3,914

3,308

3,558

2,929

2,537

3,782

3,159

991

1,581

921

765

541

651

660

138

169

371

377

105,705

116,635

115,002

113,016

95,798

70,982

61,504

75,191

73,047

81,486

75,253

FAMd or LAM

12,633

14,379

17,105

12,676

11,753

12,648

13,503

14,392

15,287

17,320

17,370

Spermicide

15,598

8,346

7,061

4,926

4,028

2,911

1,873

1,848

1,991

1,135

995

62,380

75,534

69,924

71,737

72,486

70,098

73,896

89,102

92,385

99,733

90,729

395,633

400,194

361,056

377,547

356,750

330,279

321,229

321,706

313,802

279,025

207,880
167,834

Oral contraceptive
Cervical cap/diaphragm
Less Effectivea
Male condom
Female condom
Contraceptive sponge
Withdrawal or otherc

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Other
Abstinence
No Method
Pregnant/seeking pregnancy
Other reason

260,946

238,347

229,541

183,613

181,657

175,111

171,068

175,371

190,518

194,405

273,961

160,788

96,687

96,590

106,017

98,208

124,449

121,885

116,331

158,258

146,367

Total Female Users

4,811,691

4,822,570

4,635,195

4,378,744

4,184,587

3,764,622

3,607,353

3,553,018

3,541,235

3,446,504

2,690,552

Using Most, Moderately, or Less
Effective Method

3,818,771

3,947,707

3,877,987

3,649,257

3,467,677

3,090,926

2,916,711

2,844,954

2,828,199

2,715,083

2,077,742

346,046

401,471

437,426

462,497

478,117

487,640

542,612

592,243

666,224

664,305

517,828

2,595,172

2,612,022

2,456,402

2,306,390

2,180,848

1,934,647

1,720,394

1,598,857

1,521,815

1,413,605

1,076,810

877,553

934,214

984,159

880,370

808,712

668,639

653,705

653,854

640,160

637,173

483,104

62,380

75,534

69,924

71,737

72,486

70,098

73,896

89,102

92,385

99,733

90,729

656,579

638,541

590,597

561,160

538,407

505,390

492,297

497,077

504,320

473,430

375,714

Method Unknown

Most effectivea
Moderately effective

a

Less effectivea
Abstinent
Not Using a Method

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method.
a
See Table 7 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).
b
Hormonal injection figures include both 1- and 3-month hormonal injection users.
c
Withdrawal/Other category includes other methods not listed separately in FPAR Table 7.
d
For 2009 through 2010, the FAM category includes Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, Basal Body Temperature, Cervical Mucus, and SymptoThermal methods. For 2011–2019,
the FAM category includes Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–9b.

Distribution of all female family planning users, by primary contraceptive method and year: 2009–2019

Primary Method

2009

Most Effectivea
Vasectomy
Sterilization

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

3%

3%

3%

Hormonal implant

1%

1%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

7%

7%

7%

Intrauterine device

4%

5%

6%

6%

7%

7%

8%

8%

9%

9%

9%

Moderately Effectivea
Hormonal injectionb
Vaginal ring

13%

13%

14%

15%

15%

16%

16%

15%

14%

14%

15%

3%

4%

4%

4%

3%

3%

3%

2%

2%

2%

2%

Contraceptive patch

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

35%

35%

33%

32%

31%

30%

28%

27%

25%

24%

22%

Oral contraceptive
Cervical cap/diaphragm
Less Effectivea
Male condom
Female condom

0%†
15%

2010

0%†
16%

2011

0%†
18%

2012

0%†
17%

2013

0%†
17%

2014

0%†
15%

2015

0%†
16%

2016

0%†
16%

2017

0%†
15%

2018

0%†
15%

2019

0%†
14%

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

Contraceptive sponge

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

Withdrawal or otherc

2%

2%

2%

3%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

3%

FAMd or LAM

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

1%

1%

Spermicide

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

1%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

3%

3%

3%

3%

8%

8%

8%

9%

9%

9%

9%

9%

9%

8%

8%

5%

5%

5%

4%

4%

5%

5%

5%

5%

6%

6%

6%

3%

2%

2%

3%

3%

3%

3%

3%

5%

5%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Using Most, Moderately, or Less
Effective Method
Most effectivea
Moderately effectivea
Less effectivea
Abstinent

79%
7%
54%
18%
1%

82%
8%
54%
19%
2%

84%
9%
53%
21%
2%

83%
11%
53%
20%
2%

83%
11%
52%
19%
2%

82%
13%
51%
18%
2%

81%
15%
48%
18%
2%

80%
17%
45%
18%
3%

80%
19%
43%
18%
3%

79%
19%
41%
18%
3%

77%
19%
40%
18%
3%

Not Using a Method

14%

13%

13%

13%

13%

13%

14%

14%

14%

14%

14%

Other
Abstinence
No Method
Pregnant/seeking pregnancy
Other reason
Method Unknown
Total Female Users

A-21

FAM=fertility awareness-based method. LAM=lactational amenorrhea method. Note: Due to rounding, the percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.
a
See Table 7 comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).
b
Hormonal injection figures include both 1- and 3-month hormonal injection users.
c
Withdrawal/Other category includes other methods not listed separately in FPAR Table 7.
d
For 2009 through 2010, the FAM category includes Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, Basal Body Temperature, Cervical Mucus, and SymptoThermal methods. For 2011–2019,
the FAM category includes Calendar Rhythm, Standard Days®, TwoDay, Billings Ovulation, and SymptoThermal methods.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

A-22

Exhibit A–9c.

Number and distribution of all female family planning users, by type of primary contraceptive method and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibits A-9a and A-9b.

2019

Most effective, 19%

Moderately effective, 40%

2018

19%

41%

2017

19%

43%

2016

2014

51%

13%

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

2013

11%

2012

11%

2011

9%

53%

2010

8%

54%

2009

7%
0%

52%
53%

3.45 million

14%

3.54 million

18%

14%

3.55 million

14%

3.61 million

18%

13%

3.76 million

19%

13%

4.18 million

20%

13%

4.38 million

21%

13%

4.64 million

19%
18%

54%

2.70 million

18%

18%

48%

15%

No method, 14%
14%

18%

45%

17%

2015

Less effective, 18%

13%
14%

Most effective

Moderately effective

Less effective

Abstinence

No method

Method unknown

4.82 million
4.81 million
100%

Notes: Due to rounding, the percentages in each year may not sum to 100%, and percentages in combined or aggregated categories may not match the sum of individual percentages
included in the aggregated categories. Most effective permanent methods include vasectomy (male sterilization) and female sterilization. Most effective reversible methods
include implants and intrauterine devices/systems. Moderately effective methods include injectable contraception, vaginal ring, contraceptive patch, pills, diaphragm with
spermicidal cream/jelly, and the cervical cap. Less effective methods include male condoms, female condoms, the sponge, withdrawal, fertility awareness-based (FAM) and
lactational amenorrhea (LAM) methods, spermicides, and other methods not listed in Table 7. Because of combined FPAR reporting categories (e.g., FAM and LAM, diaphragm
and cervical cap, or withdrawal and other), the FPAR data may vary slightly from the moderately and less effective method categories described in the Table 7 comments in the
Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).

Number and percentage of female users who received a Pap test, number of Pap tests performed, and percentage of Pap tests
performed with an ASC or higher result, by year: 2009–2019

Screening Measures

2009

Female Users Screened
Number

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2,035,017

1,727,251

1,444,418

1,237,328

988,114

785,540

743,683

687,373

649,266

625,808

541,661

42%

36%

31%

28%

24%

21%

21%

19%

18%

18%

20%

2,190,127

1,810,620

1,522,777

1,308,667

1,043,671

813,858

769,807

720,215

683,247

651,920

561,534

12%

13%

15%

14%

14%

14%

14%

14%

14%

14%

13%

Percentage
Pap Tests Performed
Number
Percentage with an ASC or
higher result
ASC=atypical squamous cells.

Number and percentage of female users who received a Pap test, by year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-10a.

3.0

2.0

100%
80%

2.04
1.73
1.44

1.0

0.0

60%
1.24
0.99

42%

36%

2009

2010

31%

2011

28%

2012

24%

2013

40%
0.79

0.74

21%

21%

2014

2015

Number of female users screened (in millions)

0.69

0.65

0.63

0.54

19%

18%

18%

20%

2016

2017

2018

2019

Percentage of female users screened

20%
0%

Percentage of female users screened

Exhibit A–10b.

Number of female users screened (in
millions)

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–10a.

A-23

Number and percentage of female users under 25 tested for chlamydia, by year: 2009–2019

Chlamydia Testing Measures
Number tested
Percentage tested

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Number of female users <25 years tested
(in millions)

Exhibit A–11b.

1.5

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

1,433,829

1,442,176

1,357,231

1,268,269

1,181,534

1,011,474

955,775

953,273

939,250

900,603

644,080

55%

57%

58%

59%

60%

58%

59%

61%

61%

61%

58%

Number and percentage of female users under 25 tested for chlamydia, by year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-11a.

1.43

1.44

1.36

100%
1.27

1.18
1.01

1.0
55%

57%

58%

59%

60%

58%

80%
0.96
59%

0.95
61%

0.94

0.90

61%

61%

58%
0.64

0.5

60%
40%
20%

0.0

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

Number of female users <25 years tested (in millions)

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

0%

Percentage of female users <25 years tested

Percentage of female users <25 years
tested

A-24

Exhibit A–11a.

Number of confidential HIV tests performed and number of tests per 10 users (all, female, and male), by year: 2009–2019

HIV Testing Measures

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Tests performed

997,765

1,101,665

1,283,375

1,249,867

1,187,631

1,031,624

1,113,635

1,163,883

1,192,119

1,237,968

961,859

Tests per 10 users

1.9

2.1

2.6

2.6

2.6

2.5

2.8

2.9

3.0

3.1

3.1

Tests per 10 female users

1.8

1.9

2.3

2.4

2.4

2.2

2.4

2.5

2.6

2.7

2.8

Tests per 10 male users

4.1

4.3

5.2

5.5

5.3

5.7

5.9

5.7

5.9

5.9

5.3

Number of confidential HIV tests performed and number of tests per 10 users (all, female, and male), by year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-12a.

10.0

1.5
1.28

1.0

1.00

0.0

1.25

1.10

1.19
1.03

1.11

1.16

1.19

9.0

1.24

8.0
0.96

7.0
6.0

5.2
0.5

2019

4.1

5.5

5.3

5.7

5.9

5.7

5.9

5.9

5.3

4.3

1.8

1.9

2009

2010

5.0
4.0
3.0

2.3

2.4

2.4

2.2

2.4

2.5

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Number of tests performed (in millions)

2.6

2.7

2.8

2.0
1.0

Tests per 10 female users

2017

2018

2019

0.0

Tests per 10 male users

Tests per 10 users

Exhibit A–12b.

Number of tests performed (in millions)

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–12a.

A-25

A-26

Exhibit A–13a.

Actual and adjusted (constant 2019$ and 2009$) total, Title X, and Medicaid revenue, by year: 2009–2019
Change

Revenue

2009
($)

2010
($)

2011
($)

2012
($)

2013
($)

2014
($)

2015
($)

2016
($)

2017
($)

2018
($)

2019
($)

2009–
2019

2018–
2019

Total
Actuala

1,231,311,085 1,293,835,909 1,286,574,610 1,260,206,935 1,284,715,163 1,243,901,947 1,244,040,899 1,305,139,649 1,297,618,121 1,321,225,497 1,036,300,250

–16%

–22%

2019$b

1,633,866,378 1,660,156,723 1,602,080,436 1,513,779,678 1,506,157,443 1,424,278,188 1,387,897,887 1,402,919,217 1,360,656,020 1,358,585,627 1,036,300,250

–37%

–24%

2009$b

1,231,311,085 1,251,123,962 1,207,356,627 1,140,811,588 1,135,067,335 1,073,361,656 1,045,944,807 1,057,265,151 1,025,414,846 1,023,854,561

780,974,505

–37%

–24%

Title X
Actuala

266,393,881

279,295,186

276,002,719

267,095,215

253,655,493

249,517,445

242,576,878

245,066,054

244,563,111

255,902,324

229,031,074

–14%

–11%

2019$b

353,486,630

358,371,396

343,686,680

320,838,822

297,377,286

285,699,573

270,627,707

263,426,122

256,443,913

263,138,442

229,031,074

–35%

–13%

2009$b

266,393,881

270,075,129

259,008,463

241,789,906

224,108,871

215,308,336

203,949,907

198,522,663

193,260,745

198,305,862

172,601,936

–35%

–13%

Actuala

450,028,613

482,175,678

506,887,574

499,181,475

508,494,458

493,061,463

503,186,368

505,508,702

496,501,892

521,679,227

370,902,048

–18%

–29%

2019$b

597,157,476

618,692,980

631,191,273

599,624,357

596,142,036

564,559,521

561,373,261

543,380,835

520,621,805

536,430,686

370,902,048

–38%

–31%

2009$b

450,028,613

466,258,156

475,677,094

451,887,698

449,263,359

425,462,208

423,060,985

409,501,569

392,349,955

404,263,812

279,518,453

–38%

–31%

Medicaidc

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

a

Revenue is shown in actual dollars (unadjusted) for each year.

b

Revenue is shown in constant 2019 dollars (2019$) and 2009 dollars (2009$), based on the consumer price index for medical care, which includes medical care commodities and medical care
services (Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/srgate).

c

Medicaid revenue includes separately reported Children’s Health Insurance Program revenue.

Total, Title X, and Medicaid adjusted (constant 2019$) revenue (in millions), by year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-13a.

$1,800
$1,600

Total revenue (in millions)

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–13b.

$1,634

$1,400
$1,200
$1,000

$1,036

$800
$600

$597
$371

$400
$200
$0

$353
$229
2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

Total revenue

2014

Medicaid

Note: Medicaid revenue includes separately reported Children’s Health Insurance Program revenue.

2015

2016

Title X

2017

2018

2019

A-27

A-28

Exhibit A–13c.

Total actual (unadjusted) and adjusted (constant 2019$ and 2009$) revenue (in millions), by year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-13a.

$1,800

Total revenue (in millions)

$1,600

$1,634

$1,400
$1,200

$1,231

$1,000

$1,036

$800
$781

$600

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

$400
$200
$0

2009

2010

2011

Actual (unadjusted)

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Adjusted (2019$) Total Revenue

2017

2018

2019

Adjusted (2009$)

Title X actual (unadjusted) and adjusted (constant 2019$ and 2009$) revenue (in millions), by year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-13a.

$700
$600

Title X revenue (in millions)

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–13d.

$500
$400

$353

$300
$200

$229

$266

$173

$100
$0

2009

2010

2011

2012

Actual (unadjusted)

2013

2014

2015

Adjusted (2019$)

2016

2017

2018

Adjusted (2009$)

2019

A-29

A-30

Exhibit A–13e.

Medicaid actual (unadjusted) and adjusted (constant 2019$ and 2009$) revenue (in millions), by year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibit A-13a.

$700

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Medicaid revenue (in millions)

$600

$597

$500
$400

$450
$371

$300
$280
$200
$100
$0

2009

2010

2011

2012

Actual (unadjusted)

2013

2014

2015

Adjusted (2019$)

Note: Medicaid revenue includes separately reported Children’s Health Insurance Program revenue.

2016

2017

2018

Adjusted (2009$)

2019

This page intentionally left blank.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

A-31

A-32

Exhibit A–14a.

Amount of Title X project revenue, by revenue source and year: 2009–2019

Revenue Sources
Title X

2009
($)

2010
($)

2011
($)

2012
($)

2013
($)

2014
($)

2015
($)

2016
($)

2017
($)

2018
($)

2019
($)

266,393,881

279,295,186

276,002,719

267,095,215

253,655,493

249,517,445

242,576,878

245,066,054

244,563,111

255,902,324

229,031,074

Payment for Services
Client fees

80,940,857

84,540,815

72,156,363

70,400,120

69,425,823

53,170,034

47,872,483

52,876,599

52,367,880

54,674,193

40,051,795

Third-party payers
Medicaid

449,834,131

481,262,633

506,608,330

498,739,261

505,709,855

490,470,842

501,418,354

504,313,859

495,245,884

519,967,258

369,512,175

Medicare

843,164

1,913,519

2,002,181

1,173,110

1,864,987

3,083,719

4,731,999

3,945,295

7,169,121

7,168,217

8,023,568

CHIP

194,482

913,045

279,244

442,214

2,784,603

2,590,621

1,768,014

1,194,843

1,256,008

1,711,969

1,389,873

Other

4,903,482

2,466,949

4,088,072

3,743,183

10,848,382

10,202,966

14,230,460

10,540,646

11,445,695

12,052,800

12,299,248

Private

48,445,935

50,409,637

51,655,083

63,955,467

69,210,207

95,138,355

104,000,648

132,617,104

140,145,229

147,295,805

107,498,387

585,162,051

621,506,598

636,789,273

638,453,355

659,843,857

654,656,537

674,021,958

705,488,346

707,629,817

742,870,242

538,775,046

Other Revenue
MCH block grant

21,044,962

21,205,336

25,512,030

24,439,148

19,852,391

23,095,828

18,485,003

16,526,644

12,960,533

17,488,306

16,956,909

SS block grant

30,841,136

34,001,848

23,736,983

11,229,640

8,805,626

5,601,590

4,711,602

4,285,521

4,547,979

5,972,937

6,105,713

TANF

15,580,002

14,475,023

14,517,155

13,548,818

13,268,175

10,570,729

5,347,682

7,797,115

6,385,879

5,136,717

6,077,922

State government

153,830,395

135,464,470

125,392,165

117,468,476

131,054,838

120,974,720

119,983,576

133,484,660

119,036,286

134,279,658

109,977,858

Local government

84,666,243

91,289,586

84,214,372

87,010,991

93,770,370

80,388,864

73,018,511

66,637,455

69,199,630

43,605,003

30,059,604

Subtotal

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

BPHC

4,965,372

4,090,546

5,289,075

4,625,737

11,461,645

10,080,722

12,468,766

14,319,221

21,389,246

19,194,743

15,487,598

Other

68,827,043

92,507,316

95,120,838

96,335,555

93,002,768

89,015,512

93,426,923

111,534,633

111,905,640

96,775,567

83,828,526

379,755,153

393,034,125

373,782,618

354,658,365

371,215,813

339,727,965

327,442,063

354,585,249

345,425,193

322,452,931

268,494,130

Subtotal
Total Revenue
Actual

1,231,311,085 1,293,835,909 1,286,574,610 1,260,206,935 1,284,715,163 1,243,901,947 1,244,040,899 1,305,139,649 1,297,618,121 1,321,225,497 1,036,300,250

2019$a

1,633,866,378 1,660,156,723 1,602,080,436 1,513,779,678 1,506,157,443 1,424,278,188 1,387,897,887 1,402,919,217 1,360,656,020 1,358,585,627 1,036,300,250

2009$a

1,231,311,085 1,251,123,962 1,207,356,627 1,140,811,588 1,135,067,335 1,073,361,656 1,045,944,807 1,057,265,151 1,025,414,846 1,023,854,561

780,974,505

BPHC=Bureau of Primary Health Care. CHIP=Children’s Health Insurance Program. MCH=Maternal and Child Health. SS=Social Services. TANF=Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
Note: Unless otherwise noted, revenue is shown in actual dollars (unadjusted) for each year.
Total revenue is shown in constant 2019 dollars (2019$) and 2009 dollars (2009$), based on the consumer price index for medical care, which includes medical care commodities and medical
care services (Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/srgate).

a

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit A–14b.

Distribution of Title X project revenue, by revenue source and year: 2009–2019

Revenue Sources

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

Title X

22%

22%

21%

21%

20%

20%

19%

19%

19%

19%

22%

Payment for Services
Client fees

7%

7%

6%

6%

5%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

4%

Third-party payers
Medicaid

37%

37%

39%

40%

39%

39%

40%

39%

38%

39%

36%

Medicare

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

1%

1%

1%

CHIP

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

Other

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

Private

4%

4%

4%

5%

5%

8%

8%

10%

11%

11%

10%

Subtotal

48%

48%

49%

51%

51%

53%

54%

54%

55%

56%

52%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

2%

1%

1%

1%

1%

2%

Other Revenue
MCH block grant
SS block grant

3%

3%

2%

1%

1%

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

1%

TANF

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

1%

0%†

1%

0%†

0%†

1%

State government

12%

10%

10%

9%

10%

10%

10%

10%

9%

10%

11%

Local government

7%

7%

7%

7%

7%

6%

6%

5%

5%

3%

3%

BPHC

0%†

0%†

0%†

0%†

1%

1%

1%

1%

2%

1%

1%

Other

6%

7%

7%

8%

7%

7%

8%

9%

9%

7%

8%

Subtotal

31%

30%

29%

28%

29%

27%

26%

27%

27%

24%

26%

Total Revenue

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

BPHC=Bureau of Primary Health Care. CHIP=Children’s Health Insurance Program. MCH=Maternal and Child Health. SS=Social Services. TANF=Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families.
Note: Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

A-33

A-34

Exhibit A–14c.

2019

Amount (unadjusted) and distribution of Title X project revenue, by revenue source and year: 2009–2019
Note: The data in this graph are presented in tabular form in Exhibits A-14a and 14b.

Title X, 22%

10%

Medicaid, 36%

2018

19%

2017

19%

38%

11%

2016

19%

39%

10%

2015

19%

40%

8%

2014

20%

40%

8%

2013

20%

40%

14%

5%

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

2012

21%

40%

5%

2011

21%

39%

4%

2010

22%

37%

2009

22%

37%

4%
4%

$1.04 billion

17%

$1.32 billion

15%

18%

$1.30 billion

15%

17%

$1.31 billion

16%

$1.24 billion

16%

$1.24 billion

13%

11%

39%

Other, 18%

16%
16%
18%

18%

$1.28 billion

16%

18%

$1.26 billion

19%

$1.29 billion

18%

20%

$1.29 billion

19%

19%

$1.23 billion

16%

0%

100%

Title X

Medicaid

Private third party

State/local government

Other

Notes: Medicaid revenue includes separately reported Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) revenue. The Other revenue category includes revenue from the Bureau of Primary
Health Care and other federal grants; other public and private third parties; block grants; Temporary Assistance for Needy Families revenue; and revenue reported as Other in the
FPAR revenue table. Due to rounding, percentages in each year may not sum to 100%, and percentages in combined or aggregated categories (e.g., Medicaid plus CHIP) may not
match the sum of the individual percentages that are included in the aggregated categories.

Appendix B
State Exhibits

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

B-1

Exhibit B–1.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by sex and state, and distribution of all
users, by state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 1)

State
Alabama

Female

Male

Total

Female

Male

71,324

91

71,415

100%

Alaska

3,793

949

4,742

80%

20%

0%†

Arizona

20,859

5,556

26,415

79%

21%

1%

Arkansas

42,843

92

42,935

100%

California

532,416

80,177

612,593

87%

13%

20%

Colorado

43,774

9,840

53,614

82%

18%

2%

Connecticut

27,552

4,545

32,097

86%

14%

1%

Delaware

16,672

3,243

19,915

84%

16%

1%

District of Columbia

43,050

17,987

61,037

71%

29%

2%

Florida

104,309

6,216

110,525

94%

6%

4%

Georgia

119,711

50,234

169,945

70%

30%

5%

Hawaii

4,767

244

5,011

95%

5%

0%†

Idaho

12,455

1,470

13,925

89%

11%

0%†

Illinois

71,340

8,098

79,438

90%

10%

3%

Indiana

18,889

2,081

20,970

90%

10%

1%

Iowa

25,106

2,271

27,377

92%

8%

1%

Kansas

18,044

2,417

20,461

88%

12%

1%

Kentucky

35,518

7,339

42,857

83%

17%

1%

Louisiana

38,691

12,983

51,674

75%

25%

2%

Maine

12,780

2,314

15,094

85%

15%

0%†

Maryland

34,558

4,298

38,856

89%

11%

1%

Massachusetts

46,154

8,056

54,210

85%

15%

2%

Michigan

47,485

6,527

54,012

88%

12%

2%

Minnesota

30,302

6,124

36,426

83%

17%

1%

Mississippi

33,784

1,336

35,120

96%

4%

1%

Missouri

33,352

4,264

37,616

89%

11%

1%

Montana

11,971

2,146

14,117

85%

15%

0%†

Nebraska

20,573

4,336

24,909

83%

17%

1%

Nevada

11,156

1,357

12,513

89%

11%

0%†

8,663

1,158

9,821

88%

12%

0%†

New Jersey

72,411

10,319

82,730

88%

12%

3%

New Mexico

11,186

695

11,881

94%

6%

0%†

182,235

25,431

207,666

88%

12%

7%

New Hampshire

New York

† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

B-2

0%†

State Users as %
of All Users

0%†

2%

1%

(continued)

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit B–1.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by sex and state, and distribution of all
users, by state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 1) (continued)

State

Female

Male

Total

Female

Male

State Users as
% of All Users

North Carolina

84,843

663

85,506

99%

1%

3%

North Dakota

4,475

1,183

5,658

79%

21%

0%†

Ohio

68,669

13,207

81,876

84%

16%

3%

Oklahoma

37,645

563

38,208

99%

1%

1%

Oregon

33,004

888

33,892

97%

3%

1%

Pennsylvania

147,022

22,732

169,754

87%

13%

5%

Rhode Island

22,308

6,598

28,906

77%

23%

1%

South Carolina

55,908

14,194

70,102

80%

20%

2%

South Dakota

4,411

431

4,842

91%

9%

0%†

60,847

2,282

63,129

96%

4%

2%

154,740

21,957

176,697

88%

12%

6%

15,984

3,896

19,880

80%

20%

1%

Vermont

4,883

726

5,609

87%

13%

0%†

Virginia

33,480

1,385

34,865

96%

4%

1%

Washington

61,866

6,548

68,414

90%

10%

2%

West Virginia

44,418

5,654

50,072

89%

11%

2%

Wisconsin

19,088

3,298

22,386

85%

15%

1%

Wyoming

5,541

1,162

6,703

83%

17%

0%†

Territories & FAS
American Samoa

1,461

117

1,578

93%

7%

0%†

Comm. of the Northern
Mariana Islands

1,344

1

1,345

100%

0%†

0%†

Federated States of
Micronesia

3,159

679

3,838

82%

18%

0%†

14

0

14

100%

0%

0%†

13,153

2,498

15,651

84%

16%

1%

1,849

20

1,869

99%

1%

0%†

874

97

971

90%

10%

0%†

1,843

141

1,984

93%

7%

0%†

2,690,552

405,114

3,095,666

87%

13%

70%–100%

0%–30%

Tennessee
Texas
Utah

Guam
Puerto Rico
Republic of the
Marshall Islands
Republic of Palau
U.S. Virgin Islands
Total All Users
Range

100%
0%†–20%

FAS=Freely Associated States.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

B-3

Exhibit B–2.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by user income level and state: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 4)

State
Alabama

Under
101%

101%
to 250%

Over
250%

UK/NR

Total

Under
101%

101%
to 250%

Over
250%

UK/NR

38,725

13,794

1,317

17,579

71,415

54%

19%

2%

25%

Alaska

2,114

1,831

764

33

4,742

45%

39%

16%

1%

Arizona

16,294

6,904

1,934

1,283

26,415

62%

26%

7%

5%

Arkansas

32,077

9,925

932

1

42,935

75%

23%

2%

0%†

California

422,928

133,654

20,354

35,657

612,593

69%

22%

3%

6%

Colorado

38,387

12,062

3,165

0

53,614

72%

22%

6%

0%

Connecticut

15,353

14,438

2,020

286

32,097

48%

45%

6%

1%

Delaware

11,874

4,900

587

2,554

19,915

60%

25%

3%

13%

District of Columbia

38,729

15,052

3,086

4,170

61,037

63%

25%

5%

7%

Florida

64,341

28,724

14,408

3,052

110,525

58%

26%

13%

3%

Georgia

108,289

28,868

26,455

6,333

169,945

64%

17%

16%

4%

Hawaii

3,504

895

270

342

5,011

70%

18%

5%

7%

Idaho

8,247

4,949

725

4

13,925

59%

36%

5%

0%†

Illinois

64,823

12,241

2,285

89

79,438

82%

15%

3%

0%†

Indiana

14,228

5,665

1,068

9

20,970

68%

27%

5%

0%†

Iowa

15,891

6,060

2,042

3,384

27,377

58%

22%

7%

12%

Kansas

11,847

6,408

1,542

664

20,461

58%

31%

8%

3%

Kentucky

30,732

8,178

1,956

1,991

42,857

72%

19%

5%

5%

Louisiana

34,714

11,328

1,865

3,767

51,674

67%

22%

4%

7%

5,051

6,534

3,404

105

15,094

33%

43%

23%

1%

Maryland

26,821

6,014

1,061

4,960

38,856

69%

15%

3%

13%

Massachusetts

34,131

15,220

3,879

980

54,210

63%

28%

7%

2%

Michigan

28,335

19,241

6,331

105

54,012

52%

36%

12%

0%†

Minnesota

18,759

11,177

6,203

287

36,426

51%

31%

17%

1%

Mississippi

19,833

3,528

260

11,499

35,120

56%

10%

1%

33%

Missouri

20,697

10,286

6,633

0

37,616

55%

27%

18%

0%

Montana

6,098

5,026

2,620

373

14,117

43%

36%

19%

3%

Nebraska

15,247

6,047

2,911

704

24,909

61%

24%

12%

3%

Nevada

6,420

4,986

980

127

12,513

51%

40%

8%

1%

New Hampshire

4,151

3,714

1,921

35

9,821

42%

38%

20%

0%†

New Jersey

44,189

33,605

3,156

1,780

82,730

53%

41%

4%

2%

New Mexico

10,609

1,117

56

99

11,881

89%

9%

0%†

1%

133,166

50,512

22,815

1,173

207,666

64%

24%

Maine

New York

UK/NR=unknown or not reported.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

B-4

11%

1%
(continued)

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit B–2.

Number and distribution of all family planning users, by user income level and state: 2019
(Source: FPAR Table 4) (continued)

State

Under
101%

101%
to 250%

Over
250%

UK/NR

Total

Under
101%

101%
to 250%

Over
250%

UK/NR

North Carolina

59,490

19,234

3,248

3,534

85,506

70%

22%

4%

4%

North Dakota

2,320

1,868

1,283

187

5,658

41%

33%

23%

3%

Ohio

36,061

29,150

11,880

4,785

81,876

44%

36%

15%

6%

Oklahoma

26,018

11,135

969

86

38,208

68%

29%

3%

0%†

Oregon

19,706

11,627

2,551

8

33,892

58%

34%

8%

0%†

Pennsylvania

99,905

43,984

18,813

7,052

169,754

59%

26%

11%

4%

Rhode Island

12,963

4,157

5,128

6,658

28,906

45%

14%

18%

23%

South Carolina

42,691

17,046

10,365

0

70,102

61%

24%

15%

0%

South Dakota

3,132

1,184

526

0

4,842

65%

24%

11%

0%

48,316

12,526

1,887

400

63,129

77%

20%

3%

1%

137,540

28,965

3,237

6,955

176,697

78%

16%

2%

4%

14,265

4,405

1,210

0

19,880

72%

22%

6%

0%

Vermont

2,077

2,161

1,363

8

5,609

37%

39%

24%

0%†

Virginia

20,501

9,380

1,205

3,779

34,865

59%

27%

3%

11%

Washington

36,070

21,531

9,164

1,649

68,414

53%

31%

13%

2%

West Virginia

23,238

9,864

1,187

15,783

50,072

46%

20%

2%

32%

Wisconsin

10,304

6,482

2,197

3,403

22,386

46%

29%

10%

15%

Wyoming

3,394

1,955

1,354

0

6,703

51%

29%

20%

0%

Territories & FAS
American Samoa

1,567

0

0

11

1,578

99%

0%

0%

1%

Comm. of the Northern
Mariana Islands

1,091

82

18

154

1,345

81%

6%

1%

11%

Federated States of
Micronesia

3,834

0

0

4

3,838

100%

0%

0%

0%†

13

1

0

0

14

93%

7%

0%

0%

13,362

1,760

342

187

15,651

85%

11%

2%

1%

1,869

0

0

0

1,869

100%

0%

0%

0%

651

183

13

124

971

67%

19%

1%

13%

1,894

78

12

0

1,984

95%

4%

1%

0%

1,968,876

741,641

226,957

158,192

3,095,666

64%

24%

7%

5%

Tennessee
Texas
Utah

Guam
Puerto Rico
Republic of the
Marshall Islands
Republic of Palau
U.S. Virgin Islands
Total All Users
Range

33%–100% 0%–45% 0%–24% 0%–33%

UK/NR=unknown or not reported. FAS=Freely Associated States.
Notes: Due to rounding, the percentages may not sum to 100%. Title X-funded agencies report user income as a percentage of
poverty based on guidelines issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Each year, HHS
announces updates to its poverty guidelines in the Federal Register and on the HHS Website at http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/.
†
Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

B-5

Exhibit B–3a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by insurance status and state: 2019 (Source:
FPAR Table 5)
State
Alabama

Public

Private

Uninsured

UK/NR

Total

Public

Private

Uninsured

UK/NR

19,133

12,309

39,973

0

71,415

27%

17%

56%

0%

Alaska

1,148

1,891

1,703

0

4,742

24%

40%

36%

0%

Arizona

3,841

5,353

17,221

0

26,415

15%

20%

65%

0%

Arkansas

15,114

17,821

10,000

0

42,935

35%

42%

23%

0%

California

276,757

44,302

282,476

9,058

612,593

45%

7%

46%

1%

Colorado

18,926

8,347

25,666

675

53,614

35%

16%

48%

1%

Connecticut

15,290

10,596

6,207

4

32,097

48%

33%

19%

0%†

6,837

5,139

6,987

952

19,915

34%

26%

35%

5%

District of Columbia

43,839

5,978

11,220

0

61,037

72%

10%

18%

0%

Florida

57,025

21,701

30,954

845

110,525

52%

20%

28%

1%

Georgia

47,962

60,712

61,080

191

169,945

28%

36%

36%

0%†

Hawaii

2,568

1,452

979

12

5,011

51%

29%

20%

0%†

Idaho

2,299

2,023

8,881

722

13,925

17%

15%

64%

5%

Illinois

29,498

20,397

28,525

1,018

79,438

37%

26%

36%

1%

Indiana

4,410

4,777

11,783

0

20,970

21%

23%

56%

0%

Iowa

9,989

9,887

7,112

389

27,377

36%

36%

26%

1%

Kansas

2,410

3,863

14,111

77

20,461

12%

19%

69%

0%†

Kentucky

18,529

6,838

15,829

1,661

42,857

43%

16%

37%

4%

Louisiana

29,425

7,280

14,915

54

51,674

57%

14%

29%

0%†

3,921

6,944

3,442

787

15,094

26%

46%

23%

5%

Maryland

11,956

8,480

17,179

1,241

38,856

31%

22%

44%

3%

Massachusetts

26,871

16,958

10,300

81

54,210

50%

31%

19%

0%†

Michigan

16,897

14,920

22,127

68

54,012

31%

28%

41%

0%†

Minnesota

14,962

7,104

14,360

0

36,426

41%

20%

39%

0%

Mississippi

11,400

3,347

20,315

58

35,120

32%

10%

58%

0%†

Missouri

6,824

10,238

20,554

0

37,616

18%

27%

55%

0%

Montana

3,322

6,400

4,117

278

14,117

24%

45%

29%

2%

Nebraska

3,215

5,615

15,745

334

24,909

13%

23%

63%

1%

Nevada

3,200

2,594

6,716

3

12,513

26%

21%

54%

0%†

New Hampshire

3,438

4,176

2,118

89

9,821

35%

43%

22%

1%

New Jersey

31,902

15,226

35,518

84

82,730

39%

18%

43%

0%†

New Mexico

3,156

1,196

7,516

13

11,881

27%

10%

63%

0%†

103,334

48,296

53,361

2,675

207,666

50%

23%

26%

1%

Delaware

Maine

New York

UK/NR=unknown or not reported.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

B-6

(continued)

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit B–3a. Number and distribution of all family planning users, by insurance status and state: 2019 (Source:
FPAR Table 5) (continued)
State
North Carolina

Public

Private

Uninsured

UK/NR

Total

Public

Private

Uninsured

UK/NR

30,593

11,304

41,706

1,903

85,506

36%

13%

49%

2%

467

2,991

2,194

6

5,658

8%

53%

39%

0%†

30,843

22,807

27,845

381

81,876

38%

28%

34%

0%†

6,684

5,789

25,735

0

38,208

17%

15%

67%

0%

Oregon

11,606

5,357

16,873

56

33,892

34%

16%

50%

0%†

Pennsylvania

76,435

50,121

38,122

5,076

169,754

45%

30%

22%

3%

Rhode Island

17,142

8,033

3,668

63

28,906

59%

28%

13%

0%†

South Carolina

22,949

23,098

24,055

0

70,102

33%

33%

34%

0%

355

1,765

2,659

63

4,842

7%

36%

55%

1%

Tennessee

20,637

7,346

35,131

15

63,129

33%

12%

56%

0%†

Texas

32,212

13,243

129,657

1,585

176,697

18%

7%

73%

1%

745

5,564

13,571

0

19,880

4%

28%

68%

0%

Vermont

2,746

2,550

284

29

5,609

49%

45%

5%

1%

Virginia

9,522

5,157

20,003

183

34,865

27%

15%

57%

1%

Washington

28,371

24,809

14,454

780

68,414

41%

36%

21%

1%

West Virginia

15,661

10,342

13,088

10,981

50,072

31%

21%

26%

22%

Wisconsin

12,380

2,370

4,857

2,779

22,386

55%

11%

22%

12%

392

2,064

4,159

88

6,703

6%

31%

62%

1%

0

0

1,575

3

1,578

0%

0%

100%

0%†

Comm. of the Northern
Mariana Islands

646

278

398

23

1,345

48%

21%

30%

2%

Federated States of
Micronesia

542

1

3,105

190

3,838

14%

81%

5%

8

2

3

1

14

57%

14%

21%

7%

14,447

561

599

44

15,651

92%

4%

4%

0%†

0

0

1,869

0

1,869

0%

0%

100%

0%

Republic of Palau

924

15

22

10

971

95%

2%

2%

1%

U.S. Virgin Islands

979

234

715

56

1,984

49%

12%

36%

3%

1,186,684

607,961

1,255,337

45,684

3,095,666

38%

20%

41%

1%

0%–53%

0%–100%

0%–22%

North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma

South Dakota

Utah

Wyoming
Territories & FAS
American Samoa

Guam
Puerto Rico
Republic of the Marshall
Islands

Total Users
Range

0%–95%

0%†

UK/NR=unknown or not reported. FAS=Freely Associated States.
Note: Due to rounding, the percentages may not sum to 100%.
†
Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

B-7

Exhibit B–3b. Number and distribution of all family planning users in the 50 states and District of Columbia, by
insurance status and state according to the status of the states’ 2019 Medicaid expansion under the
Affordable Care Act (ACA): 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 5)
State
Expansion States
Alaskaa

Public

Private

Uninsured UK/NR

Total

Arizonab
Arkansasb
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Hawaii
Illinois
Indianaa,b
Iowab
Kentucky
Louisianaa
Mainea
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigana,b
Minnesota
Montanaa,b,c
Nevada
New Hampshirea,b
New Jersey
New Mexicob
New York
North Dakota
Ohiob
Oregon
Pennsylvaniaa
Rhode Island
Vermont
Virginiaa
Washington
West Virginia

1,148
3,841
15,114
276,757
18,926
15,290
6,837
43,839
2,568
29,498
4,410
9,989
18,529
29,425
3,921
11,956
26,871
16,897
14,962
3,322
3,200
3,438
31,902
3,156
103,334
467
30,843
11,606
76,435
17,142
2,746
9,522
28,371
15,661

1,891
5,353
17,821
44,302
8,347
10,596
5,139
5,978
1,452
20,397
4,777
9,887
6,838
7,280
6,944
8,480
16,958
14,920
7,104
6,400
2,594
4,176
15,226
1,196
48,296
2,991
22,807
5,357
50,121
8,033
2,550
5,157
24,809
10,342

1,703
17,221
10,000
282,476
25,666
6,207
6,987
11,220
979
28,525
11,783
7,112
15,829
14,915
3,442
17,179
10,300
22,127
14,360
4,117
6,716
2,118
35,518
7,516
53,361
2,194
27,845
16,873
38,122
3,668
284
20,003
14,454
13,088

0
0
0
9,058
675
4
952
0
12
1,018
0
389
1,661
54
787
1,241
81
68
0
278
3
89
84
13
2,675
6
381
56
5,076
63
29
183
780
10,981

4,742
26,415
42,935
612,593
53,614
32,097
19,915
61,037
5,011
79,438
20,970
27,377
42,857
51,674
15,094
38,856
54,210
54,012
36,426
14,117
12,513
9,821
82,730
11,881
207,666
5,658
81,876
33,892
169,754
28,906
5,609
34,865
68,414
50,072

Expansion States
Subtotal

891,923

414,519

753,908

36,697

2,097,047

Range

Public
24%
15%
35%
45%
35%
48%
34%
72%
51%
37%
21%
36%
43%
57%
26%
31%
50%
31%
41%
24%
26%
35%
39%
27%
50%
8%
38%
34%
45%
59%
49%
27%
41%
31%

Private
40%
20%
42%
7%
16%
33%
26%
10%
29%
26%
23%
36%
16%
14%
46%
22%
31%
28%
20%
45%
21%
43%
18%
10%
23%
53%
28%
16%
30%
28%
45%
15%
36%
21%

43%

20%

8%–72%

7%–53%

Uninsured

UK/NR

36%
65%
23%
46%
48%
19%
35%
18%
20%
36%
56%
26%
37%
29%
23%
44%
19%
41%
39%
29%
54%
22%
43%
63%
26%
39%
34%
50%
22%
13%
5%
57%
21%
26%

0%
0%
0%
1%
1%
0%†
5%
0%
0%†
1%
0%
1%
4%
0%†
5%
3%
0%†
0%†
0%
2%
0%†
1%
0%†
0%†
1%
0%†
0%†
0%†
3%
0%†
1%
1%
1%
22%

36%
5%–65%

2%
0%–22%

UK/NR=unknown or not reported.
(continued)
a
Coverage under the Medicaid expansion became effective January 1, 2014 in all states that have adopted the Medicaid expansion
except for the following: Michigan (4/1/2014), New Hampshire (8/15/2014), Pennsylvania (1/1/2015), Indiana (2/1/2015), Alaska
(9/1/2015), Montana (1/1/2016), Louisiana (7/1/2016), Virginia (1/1/2019), and Maine (1/10/2019 with coverage retroactive to
7/2/2018). The following states adopted the Medicaid expansion after the 2019 reporting period: Idaho (1/1/2020), Utah (1/1/2020),
Nebraska (planned for 10/1/2020), Oklahoma (planned for 7/1/2021 or earlier), Missouri (planned for 7/1/2020) [see reference 25].
b
Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, and Utah have approved Section
1115 waivers to operate their Medicaid expansion programs in ways not otherwise allowed under federal law [see reference 25].
c
On April 18, 2019, the Montana Legislature passed a bill (signed by the governor on May 9, 2019) to continue the state’s expansion
program with significant changes until 2025. The approved bill directs the state to seek federal waiver authority to make several
changes to the existing expansion program, including adding a work requirement as a condition of eligibility and increasing the
premiums required of many beneficiaries. The state submitted a Section 1115 waiver proposal with these changes to CMS on
August 30, 2019 and the request is pending [see reference 25].
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

B-8

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit B–3b. Number and distribution of all family planning users in the 50 states and District of Columbia, by
insurance status and state according to the status of the states’ 2019 Medicaid expansion under
the Affordable Care Act (ACA): 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 5) (continued)
State

Public

Private

Uninsured

UK/NR

Total

Public

Private

Uninsured

UK/NR

Nonexpansion States
Alabama

19,133

12,309

39,973

0

71,415

27%

17%

56%

0%

Floridad

57,025

21,701

30,954

845

110,525

52%

20%

28%

1%

Georgia

47,962

60,712

61,080

191

169,945

28%

36%

36%

0%†

Idahoa,d

2,299

2,023

8,881

722

13,925

17%

15%

64%

5%

Kansasd

2,410

3,863

14,111

77

20,461

12%

19%

69%

0%†

d

Mississippid

11,400

3,347

20,315

58

35,120

32%

10%

58%

0%†

Missouria,d

6,824

10,238

20,554

0

37,616

18%

27%

55%

0%

Nebraskaa,d
North Carolinad
Oklahomaa,d
South Carolina
South Dakotad

3,215

5,615

15,745

334

24,909

13%

23%

63%

1%

30,593

11,304

41,706

1,903

85,506

36%

13%

49%

2%

6,684

5,789

25,735

0

38,208

17%

15%

67%

0%

22,949

23,098

24,055

0

70,102

33%

33%

34%

0%

355

1,765

2,659

63

4,842

7%

36%

55%

1%

Tennessee

20,637

7,346

35,131

15

63,129

33%

12%

56%

0%†

Texas

32,212

13,243

129,657

1,585

176,697

18%

7%

73%

1%

745

5,564

13,571

0

19,880

4%

28%

68%

0%

12,380

2,370

4,857

2,779

22,386

55%

11%

22%

12%

392

2,064

4,159

88

6,703

6%

31%

62%

1%

277,215

192,351

493,143

8,660

971,369

Utaha,b,d
Wisconsind
Wyoming
Nonexpansion States
Subtotal

29%

20%

51%

7%–36%

22%–73%

38%

20%

41%

4%–72%

7%–53%

4%–55%

Range

1%
0%–12%

All States
Total

1,169,138

606,870

1,247,051

45,357

3,068,416

Range

5%–73%

1%
0%–22%

UK/NR=unknown or not reported.
Notes: Due to rounding, the percentages may not sum to 100%.
d
See reference 25 for updates on the status of Medicaid expansion in this state.
† Percentage is less than 0.5%.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

B-9

Exhibit B–4.

Number and distribution of female family planning users at risk of unintended pregnancy,a by
level of effectiveness of the primary method used or adopted at exit from the encounter and state:
2019 (Source: FPAR Table 7)

State

Most
Effective
Permanent
Methodsa

Most
Effective Moderately
Reversible
Effective
Methodsa
Methodsb

Less
Effective
Methodsc

Total
At Riskd

Most
Moderately
Effective
Effective
Methodsa Methodsb

Less
Effective
Methodsc

328

3,636

41,088

6,999

66,571

6%

62%

11%

Alaska

94

1,164

1,460

517

3,400

37%

43%

15%

Arizona

159

3,713

9,739

3,196

18,666

21%

52%

17%

Arkansas

2,519

7,143

20,344

3,807

36,746

26%

55%

10%

California

13,724

97,947

190,411

136,813

484,613

23%

39%

28%

Colorado

634

14,102

16,643

4,696

39,256

38%

42%

12%

1,431

5,230

11,131

4,892

25,714

26%

43%

19%

613

3,081

6,466

2,772

15,064

25%

43%

18%

District of Columbia

1,026

5,539

8,721

2,243

36,598

18%

24%

6%

Florida

1,457

13,022

52,360

11,098

84,216

17%

62%

13%

Georgia

13,266

9,974

16,906

25,145

98,920

23%

17%

25%

Hawaii

158

780

1,889

648

4,068

23%

46%

16%

Idaho

622

2,488

4,735

1,371

10,274

30%

46%

13%

Illinois

1,708

11,749

27,641

10,600

63,006

21%

44%

17%

Indiana

579

3,222

10,410

2,244

16,991

22%

61%

13%

Iowa

981

5,413

11,084

2,995

22,383

29%

50%

13%

Kansas

617

1,666

10,317

1,664

16,158

14%

64%

10%

Kentucky

992

2,482

13,085

14,304

32,217

11%

41%

44%

Louisiana

3,720

4,319

15,677

5,744

31,501

26%

50%

18%

Maine

438

3,096

5,272

1,248

11,628

30%

45%

11%

Maryland

813

5,735

13,628

6,275

31,758

21%

43%

20%

1,247

9,829

15,495

7,571

40,170

28%

39%

19%

Michigan

651

6,706

26,058

7,731

43,721

17%

60%

18%

Minnesota

284

6,308

16,337

4,832

28,256

23%

58%

17%

Mississippi

4

351

16,313

362

33,706

1%

48%

1%

Missouri

1,660

4,454

16,978

4,529

28,867

21%

59%

16%

Montana

444

3,008

5,733

1,879

11,170

31%

51%

17%

1,713

5,864

4,419

4,530

17,958

42%

25%

25%

Nevada

224

2,274

4,953

1,143

10,266

24%

48%

11%

New Hampshire

225

2,223

4,042

768

7,636

32%

53%

10%

New Jersey

1,838

8,383

30,445

18,834

65,027

16%

47%

29%

New Mexico

124

3,558

4,803

807

10,244

36%

47%

8%

3,666

35,052

68,954

34,985

159,136

24%

43%

22%

Alabama

Connecticut
Delaware

Massachusetts

Nebraska

New York

(continued)

B-10

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit B–4.

Number and distribution of female family planning users at risk of unintended pregnancy,a by
level of effectiveness of the primary method used or adopted at exit from the encounter and state:
2019 (continued)

State

Most
Most
Effective
Effective Moderately
Permanent Reversible
Effective
Methodsb
Methodsb
Methodsc

Less
Effective
Methodsd

Total
At Riska

Most
Effective
Methodsb

Moderately
Effective
Methodsc

Less
Effective
Methodsd

North Carolina

730

17,180

42,366

9,402

77,683

23%

55%

12%

North Dakota

180

813

2,546

479

4,176

24%

61%

11%

Ohio

3,854

9,752

28,815

10,806

62,269

22%

46%

17%

Oklahoma

184

5,416

19,255

3,626

30,398

18%

63%

12%

Oregon

491

8,747

16,911

2,959

30,055

31%

56%

10%

Pennsylvania

6,754

17,601

51,492

26,336

130,440

19%

39%

20%

Rhode Island

2,352

3,785

5,836

3,526

17,175

36%

34%

21%

South Carolina

2,656

7,042

27,471

11,333

48,502

20%

57%

23%

South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas

88

578

3,009

316

4,163

16%

72%

8%

296

6,959

28,132

5,430

44,847

16%

63%

12%

9,705

23,133

48,957

40,115

137,816

24%

36%

29%

Utah

72

3,534

9,071

1,904

14,679

25%

62%

13%

Vermont

51

1,433

2,293

483

4,501

33%

51%

11%

Virginia

842

8,492

17,450

3,526

32,054

29%

54%

11%

Washington

746

10,988

31,293

10,562

58,910

20%

53%

18%

2,081

3,925

16,911

3,390

42,182

14%

40%

8%

Wisconsin

270

1,846

7,038

3,355

18,233

12%

39%

18%

Wyoming

265

895

2,920

850

5,229

22%

56%

16%

40

125

626

406

1,401

12%

45%

29%

1

313

805

69

1,253

25%

64%

6%

78

553

1,022

1,105

3,041

21%

34%

36%

0

0

10

4

14

0%

71%

29%

203

524

7,157

5,070

13,092

6%

55%

39%

78

440

584

7

1,279

41%

46%

1%

West Virginia

Territories & FAS
American Samoa
Comm. of the Northern
Mariana Islands
Federated States of
Micronesia
Guam
Puerto Rico
Republic of the
Marshall Islands
Republic of Palau
U.S. Virgin Islands
Total Users

1

27

539

181

871

3%

62%

21%

163

76

764

622

1,775

13%

43%

35%

90,140

427,688

1,076,810

483,104

2,391,943

22%

45%

20%

0%–42%

17%–72%

1%–44%

Range

FAS=Freely Associated States.
Notes: Percentages (row) do not sum to 100% because the table does not show the percentages for female users whose method is
unknown/not reported. Because of combined FPAR reporting categories (e.g., FAM and LAM, diaphragm and cervical cap, or
withdrawal and other), the FPAR data may vary slightly from the method-effectiveness categories described in the Table 7
comments in the Field and Methodological Notes (Appendix C).
a
Female users at risk of unintended pregnancy exclude users who are pregnant, seeking pregnancy, or abstinent.
b
Most effective permanent methods include female sterilization and vasectomy (male sterilization). Most effective reversible
methods include implants and intrauterine devices/systems.
c
Moderately effective methods include injectable contraception, vaginal ring, contraceptive patch, pills, and diaphragm or cervical
cap.
d
Less effective methods include male condoms, female condoms, the sponge, withdrawal, fertility-based awareness or lactational
amenorrhea methods, and spermicides.
— Not applicable.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

B-11

Exhibit B–5.

Number and percentage of female family planning users under 25 years who were tested for
chlamydia, by state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 11)

State
Alabama

Female Users
Under 25 Years
Tested for Chlamydia

Female Users
Under 25 Years

% of Female Users
Under 25 Years
Tested for Chlamydia

24,130

31,903

76%

Alaska

1,183

1,592

74%

Arizona

8,361

9,984

84%

Arkansas

13,243

19,111

69%

California

132,918

213,359

62%

Colorado

13,180

20,400

65%

Connecticut

5,479

10,584

52%

Delaware

6,073

8,102

75%

District of Columbia

6,911

14,173

49%

Florida

16,912

41,061

41%

Georgia

17,456

36,325

48%

845

2,029

42%

Idaho

1,441

4,836

30%

Illinois

14,087

29,484

48%

Indiana

6,223

8,027

78%

Iowa

6,331

10,872

58%

Kansas

3,647

7,108

51%

Kentucky

7,072

14,903

47%

Louisiana

12,013

15,309

78%

Maine

2,940

5,757

51%

Maryland

7,159

12,721

56%

Massachusetts

9,758

18,645

52%

14,210

23,480

61%

Minnesota

9,752

16,063

61%

Mississippi

8,331

15,829

53%

Missouri

9,458

16,061

59%

Montana

4,180

6,392

65%

Nebraska

5,944

8,134

73%

Nevada

2,733

3,871

71%

New Hampshire

2,097

3,881

54%

New Jersey

15,620

26,220

60%

New Mexico

3,831

5,231

73%

42,363

72,349

59%

Hawaii

Michigan

New York

(continued)

B-12

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Exhibit B–5.

Number and percentage of female family planning users under 25 years who were tested for
chlamydia, by state: 2019 (Source: FPAR Table 11) (continued)

State

Female Users
Under 25 Years
Tested for Chlamydia

Female Users
Under 25 Years

% of Female Users
Under 25 Years
Tested for Chlamydia

North Carolina

16,780

29,623

57%

North Dakota

1,316

2,095

63%

Ohio

17,924

31,276

57%

Oklahoma

11,465

19,354

59%

8,155

15,015

54%

Pennsylvania

35,895

63,148

57%

Rhode Island

3,310

8,222

40%

South Carolina

17,622

23,272

76%

South Dakota

1,251

2,225

56%

Tennessee

22,972

28,987

79%

Texas

26,801

52,476

51%

Utah

1,758

9,666

18%

Vermont

1,460

2,337

62%

Virginia

8,696

12,360

70%

18,677

30,851

61%

West Virginia

5,265

18,865

28%

Wisconsin

4,605

9,371

49%

Wyoming

1,609

2,799

57%

Oregon

Washington

Territories & FAS
American Samoa

44

392

11%

Comm. of the Northern Mariana
Islands

154

553

28%

Federated States of Micronesia

280

1,172

24%

8

8

100%

1,526

6,820

22%

171

769

22%

Republic of Palau

56

271

21%

U.S. Virgin Islands

399

565

71%

644,080

1,106,288

58%

Guam
Puerto Rico
Republic of the Marshall Islands

Total Users
Range

11%–100%

FAS=Freely Associated States.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

B-13

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B-14

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Appendix C
Field and Methodological Notes

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

C-1

INTRODUCTION
This appendix presents additional information about the 2019 Family Planning Annual Report
(FPAR), including issues identified during data validation and relevant table-specific notes
from grantees and Health and Human Services (HHS) Project Officers. The notes are
organized according to the FPAR reporting table to which they apply.

FPAR COVER SHEET: GRANTEE PROFILE
Grantees—In this report, the terms “grantee” and “grant” are synonymous. If an agency has
more than one Title X service grant, and OPA requires that agency to submit a separate FPAR
for each of those grants, then that agency will appear more than once in the Title X grantee
count. In 2019, 91 agencies submitted one FPAR, three agencies submitted two FPARs, and
one agency submitted three FPARs. In general, if an agency receives multiple grants to
support Title X services in different geographic areas (e.g., different states), OPA will require
the agency to submit separate FPARs.
During 2019, 28 of the 100 grants were discontinued during the calendar year.
•

9 grants administered by 8 agencies were discontinued because the project period for
the grants had ended

•

19 grants administered by 18 agencies were discontinued because the agencies
withdrew from the program as a result of the implementation of the Final Rule. The
discontinuation of these 19 grants resulted in the withdrawal of 195 subrecipients
(700 service sites) from Title X participation.

•

Among the 72 grantees that continued their participation, 36 additional subrecipients
(245 service sites) withdrew from Title X because of the Final Rule.

For purposes of describing grantee-level changes across FPAR performance metrics, we
compare data for grantees (N=92) that were active and reported family planning users in both
2018 and 2019. Note that four grantees were active in both years but, in 2018, reported no
family planning users; therefore, we have excluded these four grantees from the 2018 vs.
2019 comparisons presented in Appendix C.
Subrecipients—Of the 92 grantees that were active in both 2018 and 2019, 62 reported no
change in the number of subrecipients, 20 reported a decrease, and 10 reported an increase.
Fourteen of the grantees that reported a decrease in subrecipients mentioned the March 2019
revisions to the Title X regulations as a reason for their withdrawal from the Title X program.
During 2019, a total of 231 subrecipients withdrew from Title X participation because of
implementation of the Final Rule.
Service Sites—Of the 92 grantees that were active in both 2018 and 2019, 46 reported no
change in the number of service sites, 27 reported a decrease, and 19 reported an increase.
Reasons given by several grantees for the change in the number of services sites included the
addition or withdrawal of subrecipients and site closures. During 2019, the number of

C-2

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Title X-funded service sites was reduced by 945 sites because of implementation of the Final
Rule.
Reporting Period—Thirty-three grantees reported data for a reporting period that was less
than 12 months, 1 grantee reported data for a different 12-month period, and all others (N=66)
reported data for the 12-month period from January 1, 2019, through December 31, 2019.

FPAR TABLE 1: USERS BY AGE AND SEX
Of the 92 grantees that were active in both 2018 and 2019, 70 reported a decrease, and 22
reported an increase in the number of family planning users.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the decrease in the number of users included site closures,

site or subrecipient withdrawal from Title X participation as a result of the change in
Title X regulations, staffing issues (e.g., difficulty filling vacancies, furlough, and difficulty
recruiting or retaining clinical services providers [CSPs]), issues related to electronic health
record (EHR) systems (e.g., implementation, programming, and data extraction), reduction
in funding, change in scope of clinical activities, decline in the number of encounters
because of increased use of long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) or increased
screening interval for cervical cancer, increased choices for care among newly insured
clients, errors (e.g., overreporting) in reporting the previous years’ data, and
weather-related disruptions in care delivery (e.g., blizzards).

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the increase in the number of users included the addition

of new subrecipients and service sites, improvements (e.g., standardization) in data
collection and reporting, increased or improved marketing (e.g., social media), increased
outreach in hard-to-reach areas or to hard-to-reach groups (e.g., males), integration of
family planning in sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinics, and increased use of mobile
clinics.

FPAR TABLE 2: FEMALE USERS BY ETHNICITY AND RACE
Female Hispanic or Latino users accounted for a disproportionate share of female users with
an unknown race. Of the 14% of total female users for whom race was unknown or not
reported in 2019, 71% self-identified as Hispanic or Latino.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for an increase in or continued high percentage of female

users with unknown race or ethnicity included client confusion about race categories,
reporting more than one race, or refusal to report race data; EHR offering an “Other” race
option; and staff failure to collect race or ethnicity data.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for a decrease in the percentage of female users with

unknown race or ethnicity included general improvements in the collection, storage, and
retrieval of race and ethnicity data and implementation of a quality improvement project
focused on improving data collection.

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

C-3

FPAR TABLE 3: MALE USERS BY ETHNICITY AND RACE
Male Hispanic or Latino users accounted for a disproportionate share of male users with an
unknown race. Of the 13% of total male users for whom race was unknown or not reported in
2019, 64% identified as Hispanic or Latino.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for an increase in or continued high percentage of male users
with unknown race or ethnicity included client confusion about or refusal to report race
information, the inclusion of an “Other” race option in the EHR, difficulty with a new or
changing EHR system, EHR coding errors, and staff failure to collect data.

▪ Reasons given for a decrease in the percentage of male users with unknown race or
ethnicity included improved capture of ethnicity and race data, staff training, and
improved data collection.

FPAR TABLE 4: USERS BY INCOME LEVEL
Unknown/not reported income status—Several grantees attributed the high or increased
number of family planning users with unknown or not reported income to problems with data
collection, including client (e.g., full-fee or insured clients) refusal to report income data,
failure of clinic staff to collect income data overall or in specific settings (e.g., community
settings), staff turnover, and EHR-related issues.
Several other grantees attributed the decrease in number of family planning users with
unknown or not reported income to improvements to data collection, data quality monitoring,
and staff training.

FPAR TABLE 5: USERS BY PRINCIPAL HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE STATUS
Of the 92 grantees operating in both 2018 and 2019, 50 reported a decrease in the percentage
of users with health insurance, 40 reported an increase, and 2 reported no change.

▪ Reasons grantees gave for an increase in the percentage of users with health insurance
included an increase in clients newly insured through the Affordable Care Act and state
Medicaid expansion, improved collection of insurance status data (e.g., a template in the
EHR, staff training, and data quality monitoring), and on-site health insurance enrollment
assistance.

▪ Reasons grantees gave for a decrease in the percentage of users with health insurance
included targeted outreach to uninsured populations and an increase in the number of
uninsured clients seeking care.

Unknown/not reported health insurance status—Several grantees attributed the high or
increased number of family planning users with unknown or not reported health insurance
coverage status to EHR-related issues affecting insurance classification and client refusal to
report their insurance status for fear of denial of care or loss of confidentiality.

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

FPAR TABLE 6: USERS WITH LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENCY (LEP)
Of the 92 grantees operating in both 2018 and 2019, 57 reported a decrease in the percentage
of users who are LEP, 34 reported an increase, and 1 grantee reported no change.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the decrease in percentage of users who are LEP included
an increase in the total number of users (denominator), reluctance to seek services at
government facilities, and improved data collection.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the increase in percentage of users who are LEP included
errors in reporting 2018 LEP data and changing client demographic characteristics.

Unknown/not reported LEP status—Several grantees attributed the high or increased
number of family planning users with unknown or not reported LEP status to errors in
documenting LEP status.

FPAR TABLE 7: FEMALE USERS BY PRIMARY CONTRACEPTIVE METHOD
Primary method category definitions—Contraceptive methods are grouped into three
categories—most, moderately, and less effective—based on the effectiveness of each method
in preventing pregnancy under typical use conditions. These method effectiveness categories
align with the Office of Population Affairs (OPA)-developed and National Quality Forum
(NQF)-endorsed contraceptive care performance measures.17 The contraceptive care measures
are based on the following method groups or tiers defined by Trussell (2018):18
Most effective contraceptives (Tier 1) refer to methods that result in less than 1% of women
experiencing an unintended pregnancy during the first year of typical use. They include:

▪ Male sterilization/vasectomy, 0.15%
▪ Female sterilization, 0.5%
▪ Implant (Nexplanon®), 0.05%
▪ Intrauterine device (Mirena®), 0.2%
▪ Intrauterine device (Skyla®), 0.4%26
▪ Intrauterine device (Kyleena®), 0.2%27
▪ Intrauterine device (Liletta®), 0.2%28
▪ Intrauterine device (ParaGard®), 0.8%
Moderately effective contraceptives (Tier 2) refer to methods that result in between 6% and
12% of women experiencing an unintended pregnancy during the first year of typical use.
They include:

▪ Injectable (Depo-Provera®), 6%
▪ Vaginal ring (NuvaRing®), 9%

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

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▪ Contraceptive patch (Xulane®), 9%
▪ Combined and progestin-only pills, 9%
▪ Diaphragm (with spermicidal cream/jelly), 12%
Less effective contraceptives (Tier 3) refer to methods that result in between 18% and 28% of
women experiencing an unintended pregnancy during the first year of typical use. They
include:

▪ Sponge, nulliparous women, 12%
▪ Male condom, 18%
▪ Female condom, 21%
▪ Withdrawal, 22%
▪ Sponge, parous women, 24%
▪ Fertility awareness-based method (FAM), 24%
▪ Spermicides, 28%
Because the FPAR combines some methods into a single reporting category (e.g., FAM or
lactational amenorrhea method [LAM], diaphragm or cervical cap), the methods in two of the
three effectiveness categories may differ slightly from those listed above. We do not expect
these differences to have an impact on the findings because a limited number of Title X
clients report using the methods in these combined categories.
Please note that the methods listed under each tier and their corresponding failure rate were
updated in the 2018 publication of Contraceptive Technology (21st edition).29 In this update,
the diaphragm was the only method that changed tiers, moving from Tier 2 to Tier 3. The
diaphragm’s failure rate increased from 12% to 17%. Failure rates for other methods changed
as well. For purposes of maintaining alignment with the OPA contraceptive care performance
measures, the diaphragm was retained as a Tier 2 method based on the 2011 classification.18
Hormonal injection users—Nineteen grantees in seven regions (I, III, IV, VI, VII, VIII, and
IX) reported a total of 133 female users who relied on 1-month hormonal injections as their
primary method. One-month hormonal injection users accounted for 0.03% of the 398,894
hormonal injection users reported in 2019.
Sterilization among users under 20—No grantees reported female users under 20 relying on
female sterilization as a primary contraceptive method.
Vasectomy among users under 18—Three grantees reported three female users under 18
relying on vasectomy as their primary contraceptive method. The grantees confirmed that
these users received noncoercion counseling.
Unknown/not reported primary contraceptive method—Several grantees attributed the
high or increased number of female users with an unknown primary method to one or both of
these reasons: (1) staff capacity (e.g., inadequate training or turnover) or (2) data collection or
system problems, including inconsistent or incomplete documentation of primary method

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

overall or for a specific subgroup (e.g., users relying on a third-party payer source, teens,
women over 45), data entry or extraction problems, issues related to EHR implementation or
transition, or lack of FPAR-specific data fields in the EHR.
Grantees attributed the decrease in female users with an unknown primary method to
improved data collection, a change in subrecipients’ reporting methodology, and staff
training.

FPAR TABLE 8: MALE USERS BY PRIMARY CONTRACEPTIVE METHOD
Primary method category definitions—See note for FPAR Table 7 in above section.
Sterilization among users under 20—No grantees reported male users under 20 relying on
vasectomy as their primary contraceptive method.
Unknown/not reported primary contraceptive method—Several grantees attributed the
high or increased number of male users with an unknown primary method to one or more of
the following reasons: inconsistent or incomplete documentation of primary method overall
or for a specific subgroup (e.g., users relying on third-party payer source or clients seeking
STD testing); EHR-related issues (e.g., transition to new EHR, unstructured data field for
recording primary method, and problems retrieving data); failure to collect data for
“no method, other reason” category; and staff turnover.
Several other grantees attributed a decrease in the number of male users with an unknown
primary method to improved data collection, staff training, and technical assistance.

FPAR TABLE 9: CERVICAL CANCER SCREENING ACTIVITIES
Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and 2019, 48 reported a decrease in
the percentage of female users who received a Pap test, and 44 reported an increase

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the decrease in the percentage of females screened for

cervical cancer included adherence to cervical cancer screening guidelines, decreased
opportunities to screen because of a decline in annual visits by some users (e.g., LARC
users), EHR-related issues (e.g., loss of data or difficulty extracting data), clients declining
screening, better documentation of tests done elsewhere, and withdrawal of subrecipients
that performed screening.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for an increase in the percentage of females screened for

cervical cancer included improved data collection, an increase in the number of females in
need of screening, and underreporting of screening in 2018.

FPAR TABLE 10: CLINICAL BREAST EXAMS (CBES) AND REFERRALS
CBEs—Of the 92 grantees that were active in both 2018 and 2019, 66 reported a decrease in
the percentage of female users who received a CBE, and 26 reported an increase.

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▪ Reasons given by grantees for a decrease in the percentage of females who received a

CBE included adherence to breast cancer screening guidelines, a decrease in the frequency
of clients receiving other physical exams or tests during which a CBE might be performed
(e.g., physical exam), and EHR-related issues (e.g., extraction, adjustment to new system,
mapping and location of the CBE reporting field).

▪ Reasons given by grantees for an increase in the percentage of females who received a

CBE included adherence to guidelines, improved ability to identify clients needing exam,
an increase in older clients, underreporting of 2018 CBE data, and improved data
collection.

CBE-related referrals—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and 2019,
52 reported an increase in the percentage of female users referred for further evaluation
following a CBE, 35 reported a decrease, and 2 reported no change.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for a decrease in the percentage of CBE-related referrals
were related to improved data collection (e.g., mapping and location of CBE reporting
fields in the EHR).

▪ Reasons given by grantees for an increase in the percentage of CBE-related referrals
included better documentation of referrals in the EHR.

FPAR TABLE 11: USERS TESTED FOR CHLAMYDIA BY AGE AND SEX
Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and 2019, 47 reported an increase in
the percentage of female users under 25 tested for chlamydia, and 45 reported a decrease. In
addition, 39 grantees reported an increase in the percentage of male users tested, 48 reported a
decrease, and 3 reported no change. Two of the 92 grantees that were active in both years
reported no male users in 2018.

▪ Reasons given for an increase in the chlamydia testing rate included adherence to

screening guidelines, high chlamydia prevalence in the state or service area, improved data
collection, increased staff training and awareness, and an increased number of male users at
risk for chlamydia.

▪ Reasons given for a decrease in the chlamydia testing rate included a decrease in the

number of service sites, quality issues with testing data (e.g., difficulty with data extraction
and challenges transitioning to a new EHR, limitations of paper data collection, and
inability of the subrecipient to report testing data), improved data collection resulting in
more accurate data, an increase in clients tested at non-Title X sites, and staff turnover.

FPAR TABLE 12: GONORRHEA, SYPHILIS, AND HIV TESTING BY SEX
General STD testing—Several grantees commented on reasons for the increase or decrease
in STD testing activities without specifying the type of STD test.

▪ Reasons given for the increase in STD testing included errors (underreporting) in

reporting 2018 data, improved data collection and reporting, implementation of initiatives

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

to increase staff awareness and encourage STD/HIV testing, high prevalence of STDs in
the state or service area, an increase in users at high risk, an increase in male clients, and
marketing and outreach to high-risk populations to encourage STD/HIV testing.

▪ Reasons given for the decrease in STD testing included a decrease in clients, clients
declining testing, difficulty with mapping lab data to EHR data, and reporting errors.

Gonorrhea testing rate—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and 2019,
47 reported a decrease in the number of gonorrhea tests per female user, and 45 reported an
increase. In addition, 49 grantees reported a decrease in the number of gonorrhea tests per
male user, 39 reported an increase, and 2 reported no change. Two grantees are excluded from
this comparison because they served no male users in 2018.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the increase in gonorrhea testing included improved data

collection/reporting, increased gonorrhea prevalence in the service area, and an increase in
the availability of testing supplies.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the decrease in gonorrhea testing included the withdrawal
of subrecipient agencies and service sites.

Syphilis testing rate—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and 2019, 54
reported an increase in the number of syphilis tests per female user, and 38 reported a
decrease. In addition, 49 grantees reported an increase in the number of syphilis tests per male
user, 38 reported a decrease, and 3 reported no change. Two grantees are excluded from this
comparison because they served no male users in 2018.

▪ Reasons given for the increase in syphilis testing included high prevalence or an outbreak

in the service area, increased ability to test on-site, combining HIV and syphilis testing, and
underreporting of syphilis testing data in the previous year’s FPAR.

▪ A reason given for the decrease in syphilis testing was narrowing the scope of STD
testing in service sites.

Confidential HIV testing rate—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018
and 2019, 46 grantees reported an increase in the number of confidential HIV tests per female
user, and 46 reported a decrease. In addition, 45 grantees reported an increase in the number
of confidential HIV tests per male user, 42 reported a decrease, and 3 reported no change.
Two grantees are excluded from this comparison because they served no male users in 2018.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the increase in confidential HIV testing included increased
use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) services, an increase in clients with risk factors
associated with misuse of opioids and other substances, and improved data
collection/reporting.

▪ Reasons given by grantees for the decrease in confidential HIV testing included clients
obtaining testing elsewhere and withdrawal of a subrecipient that had a special focus on
HIV testing.

Positive confidential HIV tests—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018
and 2019, 34 reported a decrease in the number of positive confidential HIV tests per 1,000
tests performed, 32 reported an increase, and 24 reported no change (ratio was zero in both

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

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years). Two grantees are excluded from the comparison because they reported zero
confidential HIV tests in 2018.
Reasons cited by grantees for the increase in positive confidential HIV tests included an
increase in clients with risk factors associated with misuse of opioids and other substances
and improved reporting.

FPAR TABLE 13: FAMILY PLANNING ENCOUNTERS AND STAFFING
CSP full-time equivalent (FTE)—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018
and 2019, 48 reported a decrease in the total number of CSP FTEs delivering Title X-funded
services, 39 reported an increase, and 5 reported no change.

▪ Reasons given for an increase in CSP FTEs included the addition of new subrecipients

and service sites, success in filling vacant CSP positions, and more accurate reporting of
CSP FTEs.

▪ Reasons given for a decrease in CSP FTEs included difficulty retaining or recruiting staff,
a reduction in time dedicated to service delivery because of EHR-related training, site
closures, and the withdrawal of subrecipient agencies and their sites from the Title X
program.

Physician FTEs—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and 2019, 39
reported an increase in physician FTEs, 33 reported a decrease, and 9 reported no change. A
reason cited for the increase in physician FTEs was the addition of subrecipients
(e.g., federally qualified health centers) that rely more heavily on physician providers. A
reason for the decrease in physician FTEs was improved reporting of FTE data.
Midlevel clinician FTEs—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and
2019, 46 reported a decrease in midlevel clinician FTEs, 37 grantees reported an increase, and
9 reported no change. In addition to the general reasons cited above for the increase in CSP
FTEs, there was a shift in staffing composition from physician to midlevel clinician FTEs.
Other CSP FTEs—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and 2019, 64
reported zero other CSP FTEs in both years, 14 reported an increase, 10 reported a decrease,
and 4 reported no change.
Family planning encounters—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both 2018 and
2019, 67 reported a decrease in the number of total encounters, and 25 reported an increase.

▪ Reasons given for the decrease in encounters included withdrawal of subrecipients and

their service sites from the Title X program because of the change in Title X regulations, a
decline in the number of clients, lack of adequate clinic staffing, and loss of productivity
due to EHR implementation.

▪ Reasons given for the increase in encounters included the addition of new subrecipients
and service sites, an increase in clients, improved data capture, and improved workflow.

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

FPAR TABLE 14: REVENUE REPORT
Total revenue (row 18)—All Regions—Of the 92 grantees that submitted an FPAR in both
2018 and 2019, 57 reported a decrease in total revenue, and 35 reported an increase.
Title X revenue (row 1)—All Regions—Title X revenue includes 2019 cash receipts or
drawdown amounts from all family planning service grants.
Medicaid revenue (row 3a)—All Regions—Medicaid revenue includes revenue from
federally approved Medicaid family planning eligibility expansions in the following 24 states:

▪
▪
▪
▪
▪
▪
▪
▪
▪
▪

Region I—Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island
Region II—New York
Region III—Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia
Region IV—Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, and South Carolina
Region V—Indiana, Minnesota, and Wisconsin
Region VI—New Mexico and Oklahoma
Region VII—None
Region VIII—Montana and Wyoming
Region IX—California
Region X—Oregon and Washington

Note that four states (Iowa, Missouri, Texas, and Vermont) operate entirely state-funded
programs to provide family planning services.
Other revenue (rows 12 through 16)—All Regions—An illustrative list of “other” revenue
sources reported in rows 12 through 16 includes the following: Advocates for Youth; agency
contributions; applicant funds; Arizona Department of Health Services STD Control; Breast
and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program; Breast and Cervical Cancer Project; Breast
and Cervical Cancer Services; cash; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC);
unspecified); CDC Infertility Prevention Project; Community Services Block Grant;
conference fees; DC Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy; donations (private donor, clients,
corporate, individuals, restricted, and unspecified source); Early Detection Works Program;
earned and special funds; education income; EHR incentive funds; endowment; federal grant
(STD services); federal grant (Teen Pregnancy Prevention); federal grants (unspecified);
fees;; fundraising; general fund (private); Gilead; Grant in Aid; grantee subsidy; grants
(foundation, state and local government, private, general use, restricted, and unspecified
source); Health Systems Transformation Incentive; HealthyWoman Project (Breast and
Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program [BCCEDP]); HIV and STD funding; Health
Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) (Ryan White); Illinois Breast and Cervical
Cancer Program; insurance exchange; interest income; Justice Fund; Kansas Set-Off and
One-Time revenues; Kentucky Office of Refugees; LARC funding (Medicaid); local health
department carry-over funds; meaningful use funds; medical records fees; Metrocard
reimbursement; miscellaneous; Montana Cancer Screening Program; Montana STD/HIV
Program; net assets released from restrictions; One City Health; Pennsylvania Department of

Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

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Health STD Project; Personal Responsibility Education Program grant; Planned Parenthood
Federation of America; Population Grant; Pregnancy Prevention Grant; Preventive Health and
Health Services Block Grant; program income; refunds; rental income; Revenue Recovery
and Interest Earned; Sanilac County Health Department; Sexual Risk Avoidance Education
Program grant; Sisters of St. Joseph Grant; State Farmworker Voucher Program; State
Migrant Worker Voucher Program; State of Georgia Catapult; STD and HIV prevention
testing and counseling; subcontract funding; subrecipient funding (unspecified); Teen
Pregnancy Prevention Initiative; The Right Time initiative; Tobacco Settlement; Turning
Point North Shore University Health Fund; United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA);
United Way (various); university funding (University of Kentucky Adolescent Medicine
Program); University of Wisconsin; and Workers Compensation Refund.

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Family Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary

Office of Population Affairs
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
1101 Wootton Parkway, Suite 200
Rockville, MD 20852
opa.hhs.gov


File Typeapplication/pdf
File TitleFamily Planning Annual Report: 2019 National Summary
SubjectTitle X, Office of Population Affairs, FPAR, Family Planning Annual Report, family planning, family planning services, contracep
AuthorHHS/OPA
File Modified2020-09-18
File Created2020-09-01

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