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1.
Womens Health (Lond) ; 20: 17455057241248399, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38778774

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Due to high rates of unintended pregnancies in Delaware, the state launched a public health initiative in 2014 to increase access to contraceptive services. OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to assess the practice-level barriers and facilitators to providing contraceptive care, particularly long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs), to adolescents in primary care settings. DESIGN: This qualitative study was part of a larger process evaluation of the Delaware Contraceptive Access Now (DelCAN) initiative. METHODS: In-depth, semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 16 practice administrators at 13 adolescent-serving primary care sites across the state of Delaware. A process of open, axial, and selective coding was used to analyze the data. RESULTS: Despite the interest in LARC among their adolescent patients, administrators described numerous barriers to providing LARC for adolescents including confidentiality in patient visits and billing, preceptorship, and provider discomfort and assumptions about the need for contraception among adolescent patients. CONCLUSION: Findings from this study reveal substantial barriers to providing contraception to adolescents, even in primary care practices that were committed to comprehensive contraceptive access for their adolescent patients. This study supports the need for contraceptive care to be integrated into training of pediatricians at every stage of their education. Such training must go beyond education about contraceptive options and the clinical skills necessary for LARC insertion and removal, to include counseling skills based in a reproductive justice framework. Additional changes in policies and practices for adolescent patients would further increase access to contraceptive care.


Assuntos
Serviços de Planejamento Familiar , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde , Atenção Primária à Saúde , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Humanos , Adolescente , Feminino , Delaware , Anticoncepção/métodos , Gravidez , Gravidez na Adolescência/prevenção & controle , Contracepção Reversível de Longo Prazo/estatística & dados numéricos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Masculino
2.
Contraception ; 104(2): 211-215, 2021 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33762171

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: In 2014, Delaware launched a statewide initiative to reduce the rate of unintended pregnancies and increase access to contraception services. Our study objective was to understand the implementation experiences, barriers, and successes across health care practice settings and to provide recommendations for future, similar initiatives. STUDY DESIGN: As part of a larger multicomponent process evaluation, we conducted semistructured interviews with 32 leaders from 26 practice settings implementing the initiative across the state. We analyzed the qualitative data through iterative open, axial, and selective coding using grounded theory methods, employing thematic analysis to identify common themes in implementation experiences. RESULTS: Most practices perceived that patient demand for methods of long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) increased. Many practices had to adapt the intervention to fit the needs and constraints of their settings and patient populations. Primary care practices, smaller practices, and practices that served large numbers of adolescents experienced more barriers compared to obstetrics and gynecology or women's health practices. For current and future iterations of the initiative, leaders emphasized: (1) the need for greater implementation flexibility, (2) the importance of inclusive communication at multiple levels, and (3) attending to logistical challenges, particularly around billing. CONCLUSION: Varied practice settings required significant flexibility and responsiveness to context in order to implement the initiative. Organizations with greater pre-existing capacity were able to offer the full range of contraceptive care, as the initiative intended, in contrast to practices with less pre-existing capacity for providing methods of LARC and other types of contraception. IMPLICATIONS: To meet the specific but heterogenous needs of various practices, it is crucial for future contraceptive access initiatives to conduct a comprehensive pre-implementation assessment. Preceding any training, this assessment should gather input from participants across all roles in a medical practice (e.g., providers, medical assistants, office staff, billing department).


Assuntos
Anticoncepção , Contracepção Reversível de Longo Prazo , Adolescente , Delaware , Feminino , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde , Humanos , Gravidez , Gravidez não Planejada
3.
Matern Child Health J ; 21(10): 1853-1860, 2017 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28828547

RESUMO

Purpose This article offers constructive commentary on The Life Course Health and Development Model (LCHD) as an organizing framework for MCH research. Description The LCHD has recently been proposed as an organizing framework for MCH research. This model integrates biomedical, biopsychosocial, and life course frameworks, to explain how "individual health trajectories" develop over time. In this article, we propose that the LCHD can improve its relevance to MCH policy and practice by: (1) placing individual health trajectories within the context of family health trajectories, which unfold within communities and societies, over historical and generational time; and (2) placing greater weight on the social determinants that shape health development trajectories of individuals and families to produce greater or lesser health equity. Assessment We argue that emphasizing these nested, historically specific social contexts in life course models will enrich study design and data analysis for future developmental science research, will make the LCHD model more relevant in shaping MCH policy and interventions, and will guard against its application as a deterministic framework. Specific ways to measure these and examples of how they can be integrated into the LCHD model are articulated. Conclusion Research applying the LCHD should incorporate the specific family and socio-historical contexts in which development occurs to serve as a useful basis for policy and interventions. Future longitudinal studies of maternal and child health should include collection of time-dependent data related to family environment and other social determinants of health, and analyze the impact of historical events and trends on specific cohorts.


Assuntos
Família , Promoção da Saúde/métodos , Modelos Biológicos , Saúde Pública , Determinantes Sociais da Saúde , Feminino , Humanos , Modelos Teóricos
4.
New Dir Child Adolesc Dev ; 2014(143): 1-9, 2014 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24677645

RESUMO

This chapter introduces the innovative field-based studies on disadvantaged men that are featured in this volume. Together, these studies of disadvantaged men from diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds and both urban and nonurban settings complement and extend recent discussions of emerging adulthood, which typically conceptualizes the transition to adulthood as a normative and linear process. The authors offer that the research presented here provides a more accurate rendering of the transition to adulthood for young disadvantaged men. For disadvantaged young men, the transition to adulthood is often complex and nonlinear, and features a diversity of pathways that are often overlooked in contemporary research on transitions to adulthood. The chapter ends with a call for research and theory that better reflects the precarious nature of pathways to adulthood for disadvantaged men in urban and nonurban settings. Researchers are encouraged to draw on findings from field-based studies to inform policies and practices directed at minimizing the marginalization of disadvantaged men from mainstream society.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento do Adolescente/fisiologia , Problemas Sociais/psicologia , Populações Vulneráveis/psicologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Humanos , Masculino , Teoria Social , Fatores Socioeconômicos , Adulto Jovem
5.
New Dir Child Adolesc Dev ; 2014(143): 55-72, 2014 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24677648

RESUMO

Many children in economically disadvantaged communities assume adult roles in their families. Negotiating the responsibilities and expectations associated with becoming what some young men describe as "man of the house" has important implications for how adolescent boys move into adulthood. In this study, we share insights from field work and life-history interviews with low-income, young African American men and Salvadoran men in the Washington, DC/Baltimore region to illustrate how adultification may deliver contradictory expectations for adolescents. The findings also show how the accelerated responsibilities that accompany the experience of adultification create difficulties in the young men's transition into adulthood. These findings indicate that the age period of emerging adulthood may begin earlier for economically disadvantaged young men.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento do Adolescente , Relações Familiares/etnologia , Pobreza/etnologia , Populações Vulneráveis/etnologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Negro ou Afro-Americano/etnologia , Baltimore/etnologia , District of Columbia/etnologia , El Salvador/etnologia , Hispânico ou Latino/etnologia , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto Jovem
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