The document discusses a study examining contraceptive attitudes and use among female college students. It found that the most commonly used methods were male condoms, birth control pills, withdrawal, and implants/patches. Students were grouped as uninterrupted, intermittent, or non-users of contraception. Contraceptive attitude scores were generally positive and higher among uninterrupted users. While demographic factors did not influence contraceptive use in this homogeneous sample, evidence-based practices to reduce unintended pregnancy include improved education and access to effective long-acting reversible contraceptives.