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Contraception Initiation in the Emergency Department: Adolescent Perspectives

Tara Ketterer, Erin Sieke, Jungwon Min, Maria Quidgley-Martin, Romina L. Barral, Aletha Akers, Amber Adams, Elizabeth Miller, Melissa K. Miller, Cynthia Mollen

JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENT HEALTH(2024)

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Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to identify factors affecting contraceptive intention and behavior among adolescent females in the pediatric Emergency Department. Methods: We conducted a qualitative interview study nested within a larger prospective cohort study examining adolescent contraceptive counseling for females ages 15-18 years at -risk of unintended pregnancy presenting to the pediatric Emergency Department. Interviews were conducted in a subset of participants. The ecologically expanded Theory of Planned Behavior, expert opinion, and literature review informed the interview guide. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, coded and monitored for thematic saturation. Results: Twenty-eight interviews were analyzed. Mean age was 17.1 years. Themes were mapped to ecologically expanded Theory of Planned Behavior constructs. Within health system in fluences, prior contraceptive experiences and patient -clinician interactions were described. Within community in fluences, contraceptive education, knowledge and misinformation, teen pregnancy norms, and social media impacts were described. Within attitudes in fluences, side -effect and safety concerns, contraceptive motivations and teen pregnancy beliefs were described. Within subjective norm in fluences, peer and family impacts were described. Within perceived behavioral control, Emergency Department (ED) counseling intervention impacts were described. Discussion: We identified factors affecting contraceptive initiation/behavior among an ED adolescent population that otherwise may not have received contraceptive education in similar detail as provided by study clinicians. Adolescents ' prior contraceptive and clinician interactions, limited access to contraceptive education, knowledge and misinformation, and side -effect and safety concerns affected initiation. Peer/family sharing and social media were leading contraceptive information sources. Future studies should incorporate insights into adolescent ED intervention design to make optimal use of resources while maximizing potential benefit. (c) 2024 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. All rights reserved.
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Key words
Adolescent health/medicine,Emergency medicine,Contraception
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