Reasons for delay in contraceptive clinic utilization. Adolescent clinic and nonclinic populations compared.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalThe Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine
Year 1991
Because delay in accessing contraceptive services is a serious obstacle to prevention of unintended pregnancy in adolescence, reasons for delay are probed in a junior and senior high school population and compared with results obtained among 435 young black women previously surveyed in 32 U.S. clinics. The 388 students surveyed before exposure to pregnancy prevention services are compared with 422 surveyed after greater than or equal to 2 years exposure to a successful educational/clinical intervention program. Particular attention is paid to reasons cited by those who never utilized services; important reasons cited by all groups include fear that contraception is dangerous (cited by 40.0% at baseline), fear of parental discovery (30.5%), and awaiting "closer" partner relationships (31.3%). The last reason was often cited a year or more after initiating coitus. That the perception of birth control as dangerous is a barrier to contraception is confirmed by the large proportions who cited it among those who had never used clinical services. Programmatic implications of the findings are discussed.
Epistemonikos ID: 1e6dc9d00f51170aa414e4d4a6b3a9e4175a4ef9
First added on: Sep 13, 2013