Online Program

286039
Reducing adolescent pregnancy by increasing clinical best practices and contraception use


Monday, November 4, 2013

Rena Dixon, PhD, MPH, MCHES, Capacity Building, SC Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, Columbia, SC
Erin Johnson, MPH, CHES, SC Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, Columbia, SC
Increasing access to reproductive healthcare and contraceptives for adolescents is an integral part of decreasing adolescent pregnancy rates in the United States. As part of a community wide initiative funded through the CDC, the SC Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy is working with health departments in two counties to increase the adolescent caseload and use of highly reliable contraception by teens. Clinic partners committed to increasing the number of clinical best practices utilized to improve the quality of reproductive health services for adolescents at each clinic. Efforts to increase the utilization of health department family planning clinics have resulted in a 7% increase in adolescent patients from baseline in four of the six partner clinics. Meanwhile the South Carolina state health department experienced an 8.8% decline in adolescent patients over the same time period. Two of the clinics adolescent caseload showed an increase of over 10%. This project has also lead to an increase in highly reliable contraception use including long acting reversible contraception (LARC). In three of the six partner clinics patients increased their use of highly reliable contraception to 94%, a 16% increase from baseline over the first two years of the project, with the state average being 83%. Through the utilization of training and technical assistance and engagement of clinical staff in implementing 80% of clinical best practices, one clinic has increased their LARC usage to 17% of their female adolescent caseload.

Learning Areas:

Clinical medicine applied in public health
Provision of health care to the public
Public health or related nursing

Learning Objectives:
Identify clinical best practices in adolescent reproductive health care Describe best practices in engaging clinical staff to increase contraception usage among adolescents

Keyword(s): Adolescent Health, Contraception

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I have 8 years of experience as a community health educator and 3 years of experience as a technical assistance specialist working with clinical partners on public health issues related to adolescent sexual and reproductive health. I have working across the southeast in sexual and reproductive health and obtained a Masters' Degree in public health. I am also a Master Certified Health Education Specialist.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.