Publication | Closed Access
Emergency Contraception: A National Survey of Adolescent Health Experts
116
Citations
23
References
1997
Year
Family MedicineContraceptive UseTeenage PregnancyReproductive HealthContraceptive DiscontinuationContraceptive CoercionFamily PlanningContraceptionAdolescent MedicinePregnancy TestPublic HealthOffice VisitSexual And Reproductive HealthPregnancy PreventionInfertilityHealth PolicyAdolescent SexualityEmergency ContraceptionContraceptive MethodsAbortionAdolescent Primary CarePatient SafetyContraceptive UptakeRoutine Health CarePrevention ScienceMedicineAdolescent Gynecology
In a survey of 167 physicians with expertise in adolescent health, 84% said they prescribe contraception to adolescents, but only 80% of these prescribe emergency contraception, generally a few times a year at most. Some 12% of respondents said they believe that providing emergency contraception to adolescents would encourage contraceptive risk-taking, 25% said they think it would discourage correct use of other methods and 29% said they think repeated use of the method could post health risks. Physicians who were more likely than their colleagues to prescribe emergency contraception included obstetrician-gynecologists (92%), those who graduated from medical school after 1970 (77%) and those who describe their practice as being in an "academic" setting (76%). Physicians may restrict use of the method by limiting treatment to adolescents who seek it within 48 hours after unprotected intercourse (29%), by requiring a pregnancy test (64%) or an office visit (68%), or by using the timing of menses as a criterion for providing the method (46%). While 41% of physicians who provide emergency contraception counsel adolescents about the method during family planning visits, only 28% do so during visits for routine health care; 16% counsel women who are not yet sexually active about the method.
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