Steiner Riley J, Rasberry Catherine N, Sales Jessica M, Gaydos Laura M, Pazol Karen, Kramer Michael R, Swartzendruber Andrea
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Adolescent and School Health, 1600 Clifton Road NE, Mailstop E-75, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA; Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education, 1518 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Adolescent and School Health, 1600 Clifton Road NE, Mailstop E-75, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
Contraception. 2018 Apr 21. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2018.04.011.
Recently there have been calls to strengthen integration of unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention messages, spurred by increasing use of long-acting reversible contraception. To assess the extent to which public health/clinical messages about unintended pregnancy prevention also address STI prevention, we conducted a content analysis of web-based health promotion information for young people.
Websites identified through a systematic Google search were eligible for inclusion if they were operated by a United States-based organization with a mission related to public health/clinical services and the URL included: 1) original content; 2) about sexual and reproductive health; 3) explicitly for adolescents and/or young adults. Using defined protocols, URLs were screened and content was selected and analyzed thematically.
Many of the 32 eligible websites presented information about pregnancy and STI prevention separately. Concurrent discussion of the two topics was often limited to statements about (1) strategies that can prevent both outcomes (abstinence, condoms only, condoms plus moderately or highly effective contraceptive methods) and (2) contraceptive methods that confer no STI protection. We also identified framing of condom use with moderately or highly effective contraceptive methods for back-up pregnancy prevention but not STI prevention. STI prevention methods in addition to condoms, such as STI/HIV testing, vaccination, or pre-exposure or post-exposure prophylaxis, were typically not addressed with pregnancy prevention information.
There may be missed opportunities for promoting STI prevention online in the context of increasing awareness of and access to a full range of contraceptive methods.
Strengthening messages that integrate pregnancy and STI prevention may include: describing STI prevention strategies when noting that birth control methods do not prevent STIs; promoting a full complement of STI prevention strategies; and always connecting condom use to STI prevention, even when promoting condoms for back-up contraception.
近期,受长效可逆避孕方法使用增加的推动,有人呼吁加强意外怀孕和性传播感染(STI)预防信息的整合。为评估关于意外怀孕预防的公共卫生/临床信息在多大程度上也涉及STI预防,我们对面向年轻人的网络健康促进信息进行了内容分析。
通过谷歌系统搜索确定的网站若符合以下条件则有资格纳入:由美国一家与公共卫生/临床服务相关的组织运营,且网址包含:1)原创内容;2)关于性与生殖健康;3)明确针对青少年和/或青年。使用既定方案对网址进行筛选,并按主题选择和分析内容。
32个符合条件的网站中,许多都分别提供了关于怀孕和STI预防的信息。对这两个主题的同时讨论通常仅限于关于(1)可预防两种结果的策略(禁欲、仅使用避孕套、避孕套加中度或高度有效的避孕方法)以及(2)不提供STI防护的避孕方法的陈述。我们还发现,在提及使用中度或高度有效的避孕方法作为备用怀孕预防措施时,未提及STI预防。除避孕套外的STI预防方法,如STI/艾滋病毒检测、疫苗接种或暴露前或暴露后预防,通常在怀孕预防信息中未被提及。
在人们对各种避孕方法的认识和获取机会不断增加的背景下,可能存在在线促进STI预防的错失机会。
加强整合怀孕和STI预防的信息可能包括:在指出避孕方法不能预防STI时描述STI预防策略;推广全面的STI预防策略;即使在推广避孕套作为备用避孕措施时,也要始终将避孕套的使用与STI预防联系起来。