Manlove Jennifer, Fish Heather, Moore Kristin Anderson
Child Trends, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Adolesc Health Med Ther. 2015 Apr 7;6:47-79. doi: 10.2147/AHMT.S48054. eCollection 2015.
US adolescents have high rates of teen pregnancy, childbearing, and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), highlighting the need to identify and implement effective programs that will help improve teen sexual and reproductive health.
This review identified 103 random-assignment evaluations of 85 programs that incorporated intent-to-treat analyses and assessed impacts on pregnancy, childbearing, STIs, and their key determinants - sexual activity, number of sexual partners, condom use, and other contraceptive use - among teens. This review describes the evidence base for five broad program approaches, including abstinence education, comprehensive sex education, clinic-based programs, youth development programs, and parent-youth relationship programs. We also describe programs with impacts on key outcomes, including pregnancy/childbearing, STIs, and those that found impacts on both sexual activity and contraceptive use.
Our review identified 52 effective programs: 38 with consistent impacts on reproductive health outcomes, and 14 with mixed findings (across subpopulations, follow-ups, or multiple measures of a single outcome). We found that a variety of program approaches produced impacts on sexual and reproductive health outcomes. Parent-youth relationship programs and clinic-based program evaluations more frequently showed impacts than other program approaches, although we also identified a number of abstinence-education, comprehensive sex education, and youth-development programs with impacts on sexual and reproductive health outcomes. Overall, we identified nine program evaluations with impacts on teen pregnancies or births, five with impacts on reducing STIs, and 15 with impacts on both delaying/reducing sexual activity and increasing contraceptive use (including condom use).
Future efforts should conduct replications of existing program evaluations, identify implementation components linked to impacts, rigorously evaluate programs that appear promising, and expand the evidence base on programs that impact hormonal and long-acting contraceptive method use.
美国青少年的青少年怀孕、生育和性传播感染(STIs)发生率很高,这凸显了识别和实施有效项目以帮助改善青少年性健康和生殖健康的必要性。
本综述确定了对85个项目的103项随机分配评估,这些评估纳入了意向性分析,并评估了对青少年怀孕、生育、性传播感染及其关键决定因素——性活动、性伴侣数量、避孕套使用和其他避孕方法使用——的影响。本综述描述了五种广泛项目方法的证据基础,包括禁欲教育、综合性性教育、基于诊所的项目、青少年发展项目和亲子关系项目。我们还描述了对关键结果有影响的项目,包括怀孕/生育、性传播感染,以及那些对性活动和避孕方法使用都有影响的项目。
我们的综述确定了52个有效项目:38个对生殖健康结果有一致影响,14个结果不一(在亚人群、随访或单一结果的多项测量中)。我们发现,多种项目方法对性健康和生殖健康结果产生了影响。亲子关系项目和基于诊所的项目评估比其他项目方法更频繁地显示出影响,尽管我们也确定了一些对性健康和生殖健康结果有影响的禁欲教育、综合性性教育和青少年发展项目。总体而言,我们确定了9个对青少年怀孕或生育有影响的项目评估,5个对减少性传播感染有影响的项目评估,以及15个对延迟/减少性活动和增加避孕方法使用(包括避孕套使用)都有影响的项目评估。
未来的工作应复制现有的项目评估,确定与影响相关的实施要素,严格评估看起来有前景的项目,并扩大关于影响激素和长效避孕方法使用的项目的证据基础。