Monday, November 5, 2012

Kennedy, Krystin: Teens and Contraception


            Due to medical advances and research, there are many different types of contraceptives today with varied effectiveness as to prevention of pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases. Different contraceptives also have varied lengths of time over which they are effective. Oddly enough, the types of contraceptives with the highest prevention rates and longest time of effectiveness are used the least.
            A phone survey was completed by parents of daughters ages 12 to 17 that determined their attitudes towards different forms of contraceptives.  According to the study, condoms and birth control pills are the most used/preferred forms of contraceptives, even though they are the least effective methods and have very short times of use. Injectable contraceptives, emergency contraceptives, and birth control patches come in next in popularity and are slightly better as far as both effectiveness and length of time of use are concerned. Finally, implants and intrauterine devices come in last in popularity, even though they are the best forms of prevention according to research. It was concluded from the study that “the strongest predictor of acceptability of all methods was parental recognition of their teens’ autonomy." Researchers believe one major that reason parents are less accepting of longer-acting methods is because they associate the long acting contraception with an ongoing sexual relationship.
            Another study was done over which age groups used which type of contraceptive more and while the results were still the same as far as preferences go, it found that women above their teens were much more likely to use long-acting contraceptives like implants and intrauterine devices than teenage girls probably due to the fact that teenage girls are generally less knowledgeable about different types of prevention and have misconceptions, lack of familiarity, high cost, and lack of access. The committee that performed the research suggested referral to a public clinic as an option for teenagers, addressing the problems of cost, insurance coverage, and confidentiality.
References
Dawson, Milly. “Parents Prefer Some, Often Less-Effective, Birth Control Methods for Teens.” Journal of Adolescent Health (2012). Cfah.org.Web.2 Oct.2012.
Bankhead, Charles. “IUDS, Implants Best Teen Birth Control, ACOG Says.” MedPage Today (2012). Medpagetoday.com.Web.2 Oct. 2012.

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