“…Based on the 8 articles that were the sample of the study, it can be seen that the factors influencing discontinuation of long-term contraceptive methods are marital status (Grunloh et al, 2013), education (Abebe et al, 2020;Abeje et al, 2020;Geja et al, 2021;Isa et al, 2020), counseling (Abebe et al, 2020;Geja et al, 2021;Weldekidan et al, 2022), age (Abeje et al, 2020;Geja et al, 2021;Isa et al, 2020), parity (Abeje et al, 2020;Bereku et al, 2022;Isa et al, 2020), employment (Isa et al, 2020), contraceptive satisfaction (Geja et al, 2021;Mihretie et al, 2022), partner support (Mihretie et al, 2022), duration of visits to health facilities (Weldekidan et al, 2022), desire to become pregnant again (Abebe et al, 2020;Abeje et al, 2020;Weldekidan et al, 2022) and side effects (Weldekidan et al, 2022). Long-term contraceptive discontinuation among women with low education was 2.3 times higher than among those with higher education.…”