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Global Health: Science and Practice
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Global Health: Science and Practice

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Adolescents and Youth

  • Open Access
    Role of Male Sex Partners in HIV Risk of Adolescent Girls and Young Women in Mozambique
    Jenifer Chapman, Nena do Nascimento and Mahua Mandal
    Global Health: Science and Practice September 2019, 7(3):435-446; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00117

    Efforts to prevent HIV among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) should focus on providing male sexual partners of AGYW with HIV prevention, testing, and treatment programming and providing AGYW, particularly those who are less educated, pregnant, or single mothers, with prevention methods that do not require negotiating safer sex with their partners.

  • Open Access
    Exploring Barriers: How to Overcome Roadblocks Impeding the Provision of Postabortion Care to Young People in Togo
    Stembile Mugore
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2019, 7(Supplement 2):S342-S349; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00437

    Before providers were trained in offering youth-friendly postabortion care (PAC), including provision of voluntary contraceptive methods, no youth PAC client chose a modern method before leaving the facility. After training, over a 6-month period 41% of youth PAC clients chose a modern method, most commonly oral contraceptive pills followed by implants and injectables.

  • Open Access
    Update of: Subramanian et al., Increasing Contraceptive Use Among Young Married Couples in Bihar, India: Evidence From a Decade of Implementation of the PRACHAR Project
    Global Health: Science and Practice October 2018, 6(3):617; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00363
  • Open Access
    Increasing Contraceptive Use Among Young Married Couples in Bihar, India: Evidence From a Decade of Implementation of the PRACHAR Project
    Laura Subramanian, Callie Simon and Elkan E. Daniel
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2018, 6(2):330-344; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-17-00440

    Critical program elements to improving voluntary contraceptive use among married youth included: (1) use of a socioecological intervention model of behavior change; (2) engaging both women and men; and (3) calibrating interventions to different moments in the life cycle of adolescents and youth. Trade-offs between intensive NGO-led models and less intensive government-led models occurred in effectiveness, scale of interventions, and sustained behavior changes.

  • Open Access
    Building Support for Adolescent Sexuality and Reproductive Health Education and Responding to Resistance in Conservative Contexts: Cases From Pakistan
    Venkatraman Chandra-Mouli, Marina Plesons, Sheena Hadi, Qadeer Baig and Iliana Lang
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2018, 6(1):128-136; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-17-00285

    While there is no one-size-fits-all approach to building community support for such programs, key strategies in Pakistan included: (1) sensitizing and engaging key stakeholders, including religious groups, schools, health and education government officials, parents, and adolescents themselves; (2) tactfully designing and framing the curricula with careful consideration of context and sensitive topics; (3) institutionalizing the programs within the school system; (4) showcasing school programs to increase transparency; and (5) engaging the media to build positive public perceptions.

  • Open Access
    Evolution and Resistance to Sexuality Education in Mexico
    Venkatraman Chandra-Mouli, Lucia Gómez Garbero, Marina Plesons, Iliana Lang and Esther Corona Vargas
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2018, 6(1):137-149; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-17-00284

    Mexico's efforts at sexuality education have progressively evolved, from a biological focus in the socialist era in the 1930s, to adding a demographically concerned family planning component in the 1970s and including a wider reproductive health perspective in the 1990s, and finally shifting to a broader sociological context in the early 21st century. Opposition to sexuality education rose steadily in the time period considered, with a growing range of more organized and well-financed actors. Despite this opposition, alliances between academic, government, civil society, and NGO champions have helped ensure sustainability.

  • Open Access
    Interventions for Preventing Unintended, Rapid Repeat Pregnancy Among Adolescents: A Review of the Evidence and Lessons From High-Quality Evaluations
    Maureen Norton, Venkatraman Chandra-Mouli and Cate Lane
    Global Health: Science and Practice December 2017, 5(4):547-570; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-17-00131

    Evidence shows that effective prevention of rapid repeat pregnancy among adolescents links adolescent-friendly clinical contraceptive services with non-clinical interventions that contribute to positive youth development.

  • Open Access
    What Factors Contribute to Postabortion Contraceptive Uptake By Young Women? A Program Evaluation in 10 Countries in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa
    Janie Benson, Kathryn Andersen, Joan Healy and Dalia Brahmi
    Global Health: Science and Practice December 2017, 5(4):644-657; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-17-00085

    Across the 10 countries, 77% of 921,918 women left with a contraceptive method after receiving abortion care. While contraceptive uptake was high among all age groups, adolescents ages 15–19 were less likely to choose a method than women 25 years or older.

  • Open Access
    Youth Voucher Program in Madagascar Increases Access to Voluntary Family Planning and STI Services for Young People
    Eva Burke, Judy Gold, Lalaina Razafinirinasoa and Anna Mackay
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2017, 5(1):33-43; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00321

    Program accomplishments during the first 18 months:

    • More than 58,000 free vouchers distributed to young people, of which 74% were redeemed.

    • 79% chose long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs) and 51% received STI counseling.

    Client profile data snapshot:

    • 69% had never previously used contraception and 96% were 20 or younger.

  • Open Access
    What Does Not Work in Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health: A Review of Evidence on Interventions Commonly Accepted as Best Practices
    Venkatraman Chandra-Mouli, Catherine Lane and Sylvia Wong
    Global Health: Science and Practice September 2015, 3(3):333-340; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-15-00126

    Youth centers, peer education, and one-off public meetings have generally been ineffective in facilitating young people’s access to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services, changing their behaviors, or influencing social norms around adolescent SRH. Approaches that have been found to be effective when well implemented, such as comprehensive sexuality education and youth-friendly services, have tended to flounder as they have considerable implementation requirements that are seldom met. For adolescent SRH programs to be effective, we need substantial effort through coordinated and complementary approaches. Unproductive approaches should be abandoned, proven approaches should be implemented with adequate fidelity to those factors that ensure effectiveness, and new approaches should be explored, to include greater attention to prevention science, engagement of the private sector, and expanding access to a wider range of contraceptive methods that respond to adolescents’ needs.

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  • Cross-Cutting Topics
    • Adolescents and Youth (40)
    • Behavior Change Communication (42)
    • Digital Health (55)
    • Gender (45)
    • Health Systems (174)
    • Health Workers (119)
    • Primary Health Care (21)
    • Service Integration (22)
    • Surgery (13)
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    • COVID-19 (46)
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    • Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health (212)
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    • Noncommunicable Diseases (26)
    • Nutrition (45)
    • Postabortion Care (18)
    • Supply Chain (15)
    • Tuberculosis (26)
    • Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (5)
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