To the Editor We were excited to see the recent patient-facing publication entitled “What Teens Should Know About Choosing Contraception” by Gray and Thompson. Adolescent patients vitally need information about contraception given the patchwork of sex education policies and quality of information provided throughout the US. Pediatricians providing reproductive health care is essential now more than ever given the changing landscape of reproductive health care access nationally. Importantly, this piece highlighted the importance of “contraceptive services that respect [adolescents’] autonomy.” However, by presenting methods based primarily on efficacy, an opportunity was missed to address and normalize other priorities that adolescents may have when choosing contraception and to focus on patient-centered care.