Preventing pregnancy and improving health care access among teenagers: an evaluation of the Children's Aid Society--Carrera program.Despite recent declines, the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. still has one of the highest teenage pregnancy teenage pregnancy Adolescent pregnancy, teen pregnancy Social medicine Pregnancy by a ♀, age 13 to 19; TP is usually understood to occur in a ♀ who has not completed her core education–secondary school, has few or no marketable skills, is rates among industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es v.tr. 1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example). 2. nations. (1) While a growing number of programs have improved contraceptive contraceptive /con·tra·cep·tive/ (-sep´tiv) 1. diminishing the likelihood of or preventing conception. 2. an agent that so acts. prevalence or affected sexuality-related behaviors, few high-quality evaluations have documented programs' success in reducing teenage pregnancies and births, and even fewer have been able to delay the age of sexual debut This article reports on the results achieved by a three-year, random-assignment evaluation or a Carrera-model teenage pregnancy prevention program. The past 20 years have been filled with acrimony ac·ri·mo·ny n. Bitter, sharp animosity, especially as exhibited in speech or behavior. [Latin crim over how to best
approach the problem of teenage pregnancy, but few successful strategies
have emerged from this debate. Program evaluation Program evaluation is a formalized approach to studying and assessing projects, policies and program and determining if they 'work'. Program evaluation is used in government and the private sector and it's taught in numerous universities. has been sorely sore·ly adv. 1. Painfully; grievously. 2. Extremely; greatly: Their skills were sorely needed. neglected and is frequently limited to measuring knowledge change or assessing intentions to remain abstinent. Moreover, many evaluation's have lacked comparison groups, which has made it impossible to be sure that the programs themselves produced the observed outcomes What programs have been successful in reducing rates of teenage pregnancy? Two are early childhood or elementary school elementary school: see school. interventions. The Seattle Social Development Project used teacher training and parenting classes in elementary schools to increase children's sense of attachment to their school and family, while also increasing their social skills. (2) Some 18 schools were nonrandomly assigned as·sign tr.v. as·signed, as·sign·ing, as·signs 1. To set apart for a particular purpose; designate: assigned a day for the inspection. 2. to receive the intervention A procedure used in a lawsuit by which the court allows a third person who was not originally a party to the suit to become a party, by joining with either the plaintiff or the defendant. or not. By age 18, young people from the program schools were less likely to have had intercourse INTERCOURSE. Communication; commerce; connexion by reciprocal dealings between persons or nations, as by interchange of commodities, treaties, contracts, or letters. and also had lower pregnancy rates than those from control schools. A second program, the Abecedarian project, randomly assigned children to receive interventions during preschool, elementary school, both or neither. (3) Children in preschool received year-round, full-day child care from infancy infancy, stage of human development lasting from birth to approximately two years of age. The hallmarks of infancy are physical growth, motor development, vocal development, and cognitive and social development. through kindergarten kindergarten [Ger.,=garden of children], system of preschool education. Friedrich Froebel designed (1837) the kindergarten to provide an educational situation less formal than that of the elementary school but one in which children's creative play instincts would be , while those in the elementary school intervention worked with a home-school home·school or home-school v. home·schooled, home·school·ing, home·schools v.tr. To instruct (a pupil, for example) in an educational program outside of established schools, especially in the home. resource teacher whose objective was to increase parental involvement in the child's learning The children in intervention classrooms had lower birthrates than children in the control group at age 21 and had delayed childbearing child·bear·ing n. Pregnancy and parturition. child bear ing adj. by more than one year.Two communitywide projects have lowered teenage pregnancy rates In one, pregnancy rates in a rural South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15. county were tracked from 1977 to 1988 to detect changes created by an intervention that featured sexuality education training for school staff, classroom training in decision-making decision-making, n the process of coming to a conclusion or making a judgment. decision-making, evidence-based, n a type of informal decision-making that combines clinical expertise, patient concerns, and evidence gathered from skills for students and the school nurse's providing transportation to a family planning clinic family planning clinic n → clínica de planificación familiar family planning clinic n → centre m de planning familial and dispensing dispensing provision of drugs or medicines as set out properly on a lawful prescription. A prescription can only be filled, the drugs supplied, by a registered pharmacist, veterinarian, dentist or member of the medical profession. condoms. (4) Compared with another part of the county and with three similar counties, the intervention area had lower rates of teenage pregnancy; furthermore, these rates returned to previously high levels after the program ended. A second evaluation of this program described in more detail the interventions used to achieve these results. (5) The other community-based intervention, Plain Talk, attempted to increase adults' communication skills in teenage sexuality issues and to motivate adults to encourage adolescent ad·o·les·cent adj. Of, relating to, or undergoing adolescence. n. A young person who has undergone puberty but who has not reached full maturity; a teenager. contraceptive use. (6) Pregnancy rates among participants dropped over a three- or four-year period, but the research design did not include comparison communities or random assignment. Clinic-based interventions have also proved useful. The Self Center, a Baltimore clinic, sent staff into a nearby high school to recruit teenage clients and to offer education and counseling. A 28-month follow-up showed that black female clients from the high school had lower pregnancy rates than black females attending two matched comparison schools. (7) Educational and job-related interventions can be successful strategies to reduce teenage pregnancy rates and birthrates. The Youth Incentive Entitlement An individual's right to receive a value or benefit provided by law. Commonly recognized entitlements are benefits, such as those provided by Social Security or Workers' Compensation. Pilot Projects offered part-time jobs during the school year and full-time summer jobs if participants stayed in school. (8) A four-year study documented reduced birthrates among black female participants. The Conservation and Youth Service Corps offered work experience through community service, as well as remedial REMEDIAL. That which affords a remedy; as, a remedial statute, or one which is made to supply some defects or abridge some superfluities of the common law. 1 131. Com. 86. The term remedial statute is also applied to those acts which give a new remedy. Esp. Pen. Act. 1. education. (9) In this intervention, which used random assignment, 18-25-year-old-blacks experienced fewer nonmarital pregnancies than nonprogram blacks in the same age-group. Community service is also the main intervention for Teen Outreach Outreach is an effort by an organization or group to connect its ideas or practices to the efforts of other organizations, groups, specific audiences or the general public. , a yearlong year·long adj. Lasting one year. Adj. 1. yearlong - lasting through a year; "attending yearlong courses" long - primarily temporal sense; being or indicating a relatively great or greater than average duration or curriculum and volunteer service program. (10) That program, implemented in several cities, also used random assignment and achieved lower pregnancy rates among participating teenagers. In addition to programs that have resulted in reductions in rates of teenage pregnancy, several interventions have effected changes in age at sexual debut and contraceptive use. (11) While evaluations of these projects did not document changes in pregnancy rates, progress in these two related outcomes should, at some point, affect pregnancies and births. These evaluation results suggest that it is possible to reduce the incidence of teenage pregnancies and births, as well as delay sexual debut and increase contraceptive use. Several of these evaluations, however, did not track pregnancy rates and had relatively short follow-up intervals; moreover, only three that assessed the impact of programs on early pregnancy early pregnancy Obstetrics First trimester of pregnancy used true experimental designs (i.e., Teen Outreach, Abecedarian and Conservation and Youth Service Corps). Further, some evaluations had positive findings for only selected subgroups of participants, or tested the intervention on young people from one ethnic group only. This article adds to the field by reporting the first findings from a longitudinal lon·gi·tu·di·nal adj. Running in the direction of the long axis of the body or any of its parts. , random-assignment evaluation of teenage pregnancy prevention programs based on the Children's Aid Society
The Children’s Aid Society (CAS) is a private charitable organization based in New York City. (CAS)-Carrera model. The model focuses on reducing pregnancy, but uses a comprehensive youth development approach, coupled with sexuality education and contraceptive provision to those who become sexually active. The CAS-Carrera Program In 1984, the Children's Aid Society implemented a sexuality education and pregnancy prevention program for high-risk adolescents in Harlem. Michael A. Carrera (director of adolescent sexuality and pregnancy prevention programs at the agency) and colleagues designed and implemented the intervention, which is guided by the following principles: Staff treat children as if they were their own (parallel family system); each young person is viewed as pure potential; a holistic approach holistic approach A term used in alternative health for a philosophical approach to health care, in which the entire Pt is evaluated and treated. See Alternative medicine, Holistic medicine. is used (incorporating multiple services to meet comprehensive interests and needs); contact with participants is continuous and long-term (i.e., through high school); services aim to involve parents and other adults; and services are offered under one roof in the community in a nonpunitive, gentle, generous and forgiving environment. These principles infuse in·fuse v. 1. To steep or soak without boiling in order to extract soluble elements or active principles. 2. To introduce a solution into the body through a vein for therapeutic purposes. each of the program's seven critical parts--five activity components and two service components. The five major program activities are a work-related intervention called Job Club (with stipends, help with bank accounts, graduated employment experiences and career awareness); an academic component (featuring individual assessment, tutoring and homework help, PSAT PSAT Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test PSAT Puget Sound Action Team PSAT Particulate Source Apportionment Technology PSAT Predicted Site Acquisition Table PSAT Princeton South Asian Theatrics PSAT Pacific Situation Assessment Team (DoD) and SAT preparation, and assistance with the college admissions process); comprehensive family life and sexuality education (weekly sessions emphasizing sexual knowledge given at age-appropriate and developmentally appropriate levels by an educator-reproductive health counselor); an arts component (designed to help young people discover and develop talent and confidence through weekly music, dance, writing or drama workshops led by theater and arts professionals); and an individual sports (as opposed to team sports) component that emphasizes activities requiring impulse control impulse control Psychology The degree to which a person can control the desire for immediate gratification or other; IC may be the single most important indicator of a person's future adaptation in terms of number of friends, school performance and future that can be practiced at all ages, such as squash squash: see gourd; pumpkin. squash Any of various fruits of the genus Cucurbita in the gourd family, widely cultivated as vegetables and for livestock feed. The principal species are C. maxima and certain varieties of C. pepo. , golf, snowboarding snowboarding: see under skiing. snowboarding Sport of sliding downhill over snow on a snowboard, a wide ski ridden in a surfing position. Derived from surfing and influenced also by skateboarding as well as skiing, snowboarding began to burgeon and swimming. These five major activities are supplemented by two service components--mental health care (which includes counseling and crisis intervention crisis intervention Psychiatry The counseling of a person suffering from a stressful life event–eg, AIDS, cancer, death, divorce, by providing mental and moral support. See Hotline. , as needed as needed prn. See prn order. , and weekly discussion groups led by a social worker) and medical care (which includes an annual comprehensive medical exam). Medical care is provided by the Mt. Sinai Hospital Sinai Hospital is a Baltimore, Maryland hospital originally founded in 1866 as the Hebrew Hospital and Asylum. It is now a Jewish-sponsored teaching hospital that provides care for all people. Adolescent Health Center; program staff schedule adolescents' apppointments and accompany them on their visits. Reproductive health Within the framework of WHO's definition of health[1] as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, reproductive health, or sexual health/hygiene care offered through the center includes physical exams, testing for sexually transmitted infections, a wide range of contraceptive options (with condoms always being available) and counseling, as needed. If the health center refers a young person for specialty care, program staff follow up and help with accessing these services. The intervention also provides full dental care through the CAS dental clinic. Throughout the school year, program activities run all five weekdays, generally for about three hours per day. Most program sites divide participants into 2-3 groups and rotate them among the five major activities offered. One group might receive sexuality education on Tuesday and Thursday, for example, while another group attends Job Club; on alternate days, the groups involved would be reversed. Most students participate in individual sports and creative expression activities at least once a week, and receive academic assistance daily. Over the summer, program activities include maintenance meetings to reinforce young people's sexuality education and academic skills; during the summer cycle, participants also receive job assistance and participate in social events, recreational activities and cultural trips. Each site is staffed by part-time employees, who run the various components, and by a full-time coordinator. In addition, a full-time community organizer handles day-to-day logistics at each site and maintains continuous contact with young people and their parents. The community organizer is a community member selected because of good rapport The former name of device management software from Wyse Technology, San Jose, CA (www.wyse.com) that is designed to centrally control up to 100,000+ devices, including Wyse thin clients (see Winterm), Palm, PocketPC and other mobile devices. with residents; this staff person follows up promptly if a young person fails to attend the program. In this article, we report the results of an evaluation of the CAS-Carrera program that gathered data from six sites in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. . These sites were chosen (from 42 in the New York City area that applied to participate) for the experimental evaluation design because they were judged most likely to faithfully implement the program, given their reputation and history, site capacity and staff. All six are youth agencies that serve disadvantaged This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details. This article has been tagged since September 2007. , inner-city populations. Staff for the academic assistance, sexuality education and Job Club components were hired by the Children's Aid Society to work at all six sites. Dr. Carrera and his staff trained all program staff and visited each site regularly to ensure high-quality program implementation. DATA AND METHODS Recruitment and Random Assignment Adolescents were eligible to participate if they were not enrolled in an ongoing, structured after-school program; if they would be aged 13-15 on July 1, 1997; and, because the Carrera model is a primary prevention program, if they were not currently pregnant and were not parents. The agencies used a variety of recruitment strategies, including conducting outreach in schools, distributing flyers, contacting families on their mailing lists An automated e-mail system on the Internet, which is maintained by subject matter. There are thousands of such lists that reach millions of individuals and businesses. New users generally subscribe by sending an e-mail with the word "subscribe" in it and subsequently receive all new and recruiting adolescents who were already involved in their recreational activities. Each site recruited 100 students. Baseline data were collected from February through April 1997. After the evaluation team conducted the baseline interview, students were asked to draw envelopes to determine whether they would be assigned to the Carrera program or t6 an alternative (control) program. At most sites, the alternative was the agency's regular youth program (which might include recreational activities, homework help, arts and crafts arts and crafts, term for that general field of applied design in which hand fabrication is dominant. The term was coined in England in the late 19th cent. as a label for the then-current movement directed toward the revivifying of the decorative arts. , or only drop-in privileges at the agency); none of the agencies had health care services on-site. Prior to the baseline data collection, parents were given an extensive orientation about the evaluation design and the individual programs. Both parents and adolescents signed consent forms for participation in the program and its evaluation, including the random-assignment procedure. Complaints about program assignments were minimal, and some young people preferred the shorter time commitment required by the control programs. Data Collection The three-year program evaluation drew on linked data from three sources: annual surveys of teenagers' characteristics and program outcomes; annual tests of knowledge of sexual topics administered by the evaluation team at the same time as the annual surveys; and monthly attendance records provided by program staff. To facilitate tracking, both program and control students were contacted several times a year, staff sent them birthday cards, and participants received cash and other incentives whenever data were collected. Home visits, telephone calls and visits to the program sites were used to locate and survey young people who did not participate in scheduled data collection efforts. In the program!group, the adolescents' self-reported data on their sexual activity, pregnancies and births were comparable to information on those events provided by the program staff and obtained from the adolescents' medical records. The Sample Our analysis is based on the 81% of the original sample484 program and control adolescents-who supplied data at the three-year follow-up (Table 1). The sample included adolescents of both sexes and was fairly evenly divided into each of the three targeted ages (13, 14 and 15). Sixty percent of youth assigned to the program were non-Hispanic black (of African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. or Caribbean descent descent, in anthropology, method of classifying individuals in terms of their various kinship connections. Matrilineal and patrilineal descent refer to the mother's or father's sib (or other group), respectively. ), and most of the remainder were Hispanic. Many came from economically stressed families: Twenty-one percent lived in a household with no working adult and received entitlements; another 40% lived with an unemployed adult or received benefits. The majority of program participants lived in single-parent homes. Moreover, 28% reported that their parents or another adult family member had ever participated in or experienced one of the following social risk factors--abuse of substances, domestic violence, illness, incarceration Confinement in a jail or prison; imprisonment. Police officers and other law enforcement officers are authorized by federal, state, and local lawmakers to arrest and confine persons suspected of crimes. The judicial system is authorized to confine persons convicted of crimes. or unemployment. Nineteen percent reported having parents with two or more of these factors. Two-fifths of the program adolescents had taken part in an activity, but not in a structured program, at the site before being recruited for the evaluation. Three in 10 had paid employment at baseline, and almost nine in 10 had had a medical checkup check·up n. 1. An examination or inspection. 2. A general physical examination. checkup See Yearly checkup. in the previous year. One-quarter of the program participants had had sexual intercourse sexual intercourse or coitus or copulation Act in which the male reproductive organ enters the female reproductive tract (see reproductive system). by the time they enrolled in the evaluation. We created a six-point scale measuring how many of the following barriers to healthy social development each young person reported: having parents who had experienced two or more of the selected problems listed in the table; having a poor relationship with one's mother; * living in an unsafe neighborhood; having no relationship with a church or faith center; living in a household of low socioeconomic status socioeconomic status, n the position of an individual on a socio-economic scale that measures such factors as education, income, type of occupation, place of residence, and in some populations, ethnicity and religion. ; and having friends who engaged in three or more delinquent delinquent 1) adj. not paid in full amount or on time. 2) n. short for an underage violator of the law as in juvenile delinquent. DELINQUENT, civil law. He who has been guilty of some crime, offence or failure of duty. behaviors (specifically, participating in physical fights, carrying a weapon, using a weapon, stealing, being arrested and damaging school property.) Adolescents who participated in the program scored a mean of 1.5 on this barriers scale (not shown). They also reported a mean of 1.1 delinquent behaviors. The experimental and control groups did not differ significantly by demographic and socioeconomic so·ci·o·ec·o·nom·ic adj. Of or involving both social and economic factors. socioeconomic Adjective of or involving economic and social factors Adj. 1. characteristics. The groups also did not differ, even within gender groups, in their relationships with their mother, school grade or previous participation in an after-school program (not shown). Analytic an·a·lyt·ic or an·a·lyt·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to analysis or analytics. 2. Expert in or using analysis, especially one who thinks in a logical manner. 3. Psychoanalytic. Techniques Our primary outcomes of interest were pregnancy and childbirth childbirth: see birth. Childbirth Childlessness (See BARRENNESS.) Artemis (Rom. Diana) goddess of childbirth. [Gk. Myth. . Participants were asked about pregnancy and birth histories at each annual survey. Males were asked if they knew for sure whether they had caused a pregnancy or birth, if they did not know but thought they had, or if they did not know but thought they had not. Our analysis also includes intermediate outcomes related to pregnancy. First, we assessed sexuality-related knowledge at three points in time, using a 72-item comprehensive instrument that included questions on physiology physiology (fĭzēŏl`əjē), study of the normal functioning of animals and plants during life and of the activities by which life is maintained and transmitted. It is based fundamentally on the activities of protoplasm. , contraception contraception: see birth control. contraception Birth control by prevention of conception or impregnation. The most common method is sterilization. The most effective temporary methods are nearly 99% effective if used consistently and correctly. , gender differences, sexuality and pregnancy (alpha=.90). Adolescents completed this questionnaire prior to random assignment and again at the end of the first and second program years. We calculated changes in the percentage of correct responses to evaluate gains in knowledge over time. All evaluation participants were also asked whether they had initiated sexual intercourse. For females only, we assessed whether they had been asked to have sex when they did not want to, and how they had responded in such situations. To gauge the extent of effective contraceptive use, we asked all sexually experienced adolescents whether they had used a condom 1. condom - The protective plastic bag that accompanies 3.5-inch microfloppy diskettes. Rarely, also used of (paper) disk envelopes. Unlike the write protect tab, the condom (when left on) not only impedes the practice of SEX but has also been shown to have a high failure or any other contraceptive at last intercourse. We also questioned adolescents about comprehensive health care, because those who have better access to consistent, high-quality primary care are also likely to have better access to reproductive health care when they need it; in addition, overall health status affects other documented precursors precursors, (prēkur´s n.pl particles or compounds that precede something. of early pregnancy. For example, undiagnosed vision problems or ineffective asthma management can affect school performance, and success in school is related to the risk of early pregnancy and childbearing. (12) We asked about five desirable health care outcomes: having received medical care in a setting other than an emergency room; having had a medical checkup in the last year; having been given a social assessment (i.e., answering questions about broader family and environmental factors) at that checkup; having had a hepatitis B Hepatitis B Definition Hepatitis B is a potentially serious form of liver inflammation due to infection by the hepatitis B virus (HBV). It occurs in both rapidly developing (acute) and long-lasting (chronic) forms, and is one of the most common chronic vaccination vaccination, means of producing immunity against pathogens, such as viruses and bacteria, by the introduction of live, killed, or altered antigens that stimulate the body to produce antibodies against more dangerous forms. ; and having had a dental checkup in the last year. We converted these items into a dichotomous di·chot·o·mous adj. 1. Divided or dividing into two parts or classifications. 2. Characterized by dichotomy. di·chot variable, coded one if young people reported four or five of these outcomes and zero otherwise. We used chi-square analyses and analyses of variance The discrepancy between what a party to a lawsuit alleges will be proved in pleadings and what the party actually proves at trial. In Zoning law, an official permit to use property in a manner that departs from the way in which other property in the same locality to test for significant differences between the program and control groups in the sexuality, reproductive re·pro·duc·tive adj. 1. Of or relating to reproduction. 2. Tending to reproduce. reproductive subserving or pertaining to reproduction. and primary health care outcomes. Logistic regression In statistics, logistic regression is a regression model for binomially distributed response/dependent variables. It is useful for modeling the probability of an event occurring as a function of other factors. analyses were performed to assess whether participation in the control program had an independent impact on the outcomes, once baseline characteristics baseline characteristic Medical practice An initial finding or value in a Pt, before any formal intervention , age, ethnicity ethnicity Vox populi Racial status–ie, African American, Asian, Caucasian, Hispanic and number of barriers to social development were controlled for. In each regression regression, in psychology: see defense mechanism. regression In statistics, a process for determining a line or curve that best represents the general trend of a data set. , all adolescents who had originally been assigned to either group and who were contacted after three years were included, regardless of the actual attendance records of program students. This means that the evaluation is likely to underestimate the effects of the CAS-Carrera model, especially when the model is compared with no intervention; thus, our analysis may more accurately estimate the effects of program exposure (which could have been minimal) compared with what young people can find on their own. (Although all control adolescents were offered an alternative program, some stayed with that alternative program, while others decided to try another or to drop out entirely.) RESULTS Bivariate bi·var·i·ate adj. Mathematics Having two variables: bivariate binomial distribution. Adj. 1. Analyses Three years after enrollment, 79% of participants were still involved at some level in their CAS-Carrera program: Forty-eight percent were actively involved in all program components, and 31% had contact with program staff outside of the weekday, after-school schedule. Those who were no longer involved had moved (8%); had never participated (5%); or had family issues that precluded participation, had scheduling conflicts or were incarcerated incarcerated /in·car·cer·at·ed/ (in-kahr´ser-at?ed) imprisoned; constricted; subjected to incarceration. in·car·cer·at·ed adj. Confined or trapped, as a hernia. (8%). In contrast, only 36% of the control students were regularly participating in a program after three years, a retention rate that represents a decline from 42% at the end of the first two years. Over three full years of programming (i.e., combining fall semester se·mes·ter n. One of two divisions of 15 to 18 weeks each of an academic year. [German, from Latin (cursus) s , spring semester and summer cycles), adolescents assigned to the CAS-Carrera program attended about 16 hours per month, on average; among the 48% who were most actively involved, the average was 22 hours. Participants spent the greatest number of hours receiving academic support, because most program sites offered tutoring, homework help and similar activities daily. (Job Club, family life and sexuality education, artistic self-expression and sports were generally offered on alternating days.) The community organizers made about two contacts per month with adolescents or their families outside of program hours. Their logs suggest that absenteeism ab·sen·tee·ism n. 1. Habitual failure to appear, especially for work or other regular duty. 2. The rate of occurrence of habitual absence from work or duty. was caused by teenagers' family responsibilities (such as having to baby-sit younger siblings siblings npl (formal) → frères et sœurs mpl (de mêmes parents) ), family mobility, employment, educational activities and participation in extracurricular activities at school. Parents sometimes punished pun·ish v. pun·ished, pun·ish·ing, pun·ish·es v.tr. 1. To subject to a penalty for an offense, sin, or fault. 2. To inflict a penalty for (an offense). 3. their children by making them miss program days, a practice that the program discouraged dis·cour·age tr.v. dis·cour·aged, dis·cour·ag·ing, dis·cour·ag·es 1. To deprive of confidence, hope, or spirit. 2. To hamper by discouraging; deter. 3. . Among the program participants only, we examined the total number of hours spent in program activities during the fall and spring cycles over the three years by participants' characteristics. The oldest females attended significantly more hours than the oldest males (225 vs. 182--Table 2), and sexually experienced females attended significantly more hours than sexually experienced males (203 vs. 167). However, a multivariate analysis multivariate analysis, n a statistical approach used to evaluate multiple variables. multivariate analysis, n a set of techniques used when variation in several variables has to be studied simultaneously. based on the total sample showed that only prior sexual experience was independently and negatively related to attendance, net of the other variables in the table (not shown). When we compared the sexual, reproductive and health care outcomes among program and control students, we found gains in knowledge over time to be significantly greater among program participants than among controls: The number of correct responses on the knowledge questionnaire rose by 22% and 11%, respectively (Table 3). Females in the program were significantly more likely than those in the control group to say they had chosen not to have sex when pressured (75% vs. 36%). Program women were significantly less likely than controls to have ever had intercourse. Moreover, sexually experienced program females were significantly more likely than controls to have used a condom with a highly effective method (i.e., the pill, the injectable in·ject·a·ble adj. Capable of being injected. Used of a drug. n. A drug or medicine that can be injected. or the implant implant /im·plant/ (im-plant´) to insert or to graft (tissue, or inert or radioactive material) into intact tissues or a body cavity. ) at last intercourse (36% vs. 20%). There were no significant differences by group assignment, however, in the proportions of young women who reported having used a condom at last coitus coitus /co·i·tus/ (ko´it-us) sexual connection per vaginam between male and female.co´ital coitus incomple´tus , coitus interrup´tus . Perhaps most important, at the third-year follow-up, females in the CAS-Carrera program had significantly lower rates of pregnancies and births than control females. While male participants in the program also had significantly higher gains in knowledge than controls, the other positive sexual and reproductive outcomes found among women were not evident among men. In fact, program males were significantly less likely than control males to have used a condom along with a highly effective method at last intercourse (9% vs. 20%). Young people in the CAS-Carrera program were more likely than controls to receive health care at a place other than the emergency room (94% vs. 83%). Further, the proportion of males who had received a social assessment at their last doctor visit was twice as high among program males as among control males (65% vs. 32%). Program participants of both sexes were significantly more likely than control students to have had a hepatitis B vaccination, an often neglected immunization immunization: see immunity; vaccination. . There were no significant differences by group assignment, however, in receipt of dental care or a medical checkup in the last year. Program participants of both genders were significantly more likely than controls to report five, or four of the five, desirable health care outcomes. Sexually experienced adolescents also were asked about their reproductive health care-seeking behavior. Among males, the proportions who had made such a visit were significantly higher among program participants than among controls (74% vs. 46%). While the proportion having made such a visit was also higher among program females than among controls, the difference was not significant. Multivariate The use of multiple variables in a forecasting model. Analyses Because the significant differences at the bivariate level could have been caused by factors other than the program's effects, we present results of logistic regression analyses that controlled for age, ethnicity, baseline measures of the outcome variables and social development barriers at intake. These regressions were conducted for the four most important outcomes only--that is, having become pregnant or caused a pregnancy, having used a condom and hormonal hormonal, adj/n beneficial component in some essential oils that helps to bring hormone secretions to normal levels. hormonal emanating from or pertaining to hormones. method at last intercourse, being sexually active and having four or five of the positive health care outcomes. We did not assess the program's effects on the likelihood of a live birth because so few occurred over the period. Although we conducted regressions that combined program males and females--and found that program participation was a significant, independent contributor in several regressions--because the significant findings were created for the most part by one gender group or the other, we present only gender-specific findings. Each regression was first performed using a dummy variable This article is not about "dummy variables" as that term is usually understood in mathematics. See free variables and bound variables. In regression analysis, a dummy variable for the individual program site. However, since neither the significance nor the magnitude of the odds ratios changed when site variables were included, we excluded site variables from the analysis. The odds ratios in the first panel of Table 4 (page 250) estimate the relative likelihood of each outcome among the program adolescents compared with that among control teenagers, net of the control variables. The odds of becoming pregnant were significantly reduced among young women in the CAS-Carrera program, compared with controls (odds ratio, 0.3). Further, female program participants had significantly reduced odds of currently being sexually active after three years of program exposure (0.5) and significantly increased odds of having used a condom and a hormonal method at last intercourse (2.4). As in the bivariate analysis, we found no significant program effect on these outcomes among males. One outcome was significant for both males and females: The odds of having received good health care were twice as high among program participants as among controls (2.0-2.1). As might be expected, having had intercourse before enrollment independently increased the odds that students would currently be sexually active and that they would have become pregnant or caused a pregnancy; age also had the expected positive effects on these outcomes. The number of social development barriers significantly affected only females' odds of being sexually active (1.5), while being black (as opposed to Hispanic) increased the odds of currently having sex among males only (2.4) and increased the odds of desirable health care outcomes among females only (2.0). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS This study has several potential limitations. Because program and control teenagers sometimes attended different programs located at the same site, some exchange of information, or "contamination" of the control group might have occurred. This would, however, likely diminish differences in outcome between program and control students. Further, our analysis followed these young people for three years, but the observed advantages among program students might dissipate dis·si·pate v. dis·si·pat·ed, dis·si·pat·ing, dis·si·pates v.tr. 1. To drive away; disperse. 2. over time. These data are from New York City sites only, and they were collected from a sample that was overwhelmingly black and Hispanic. Thus, the data reported here do not reflect suburban and rural teenagers or those from other racial or ethnic groups. The sites in our study also benefited from the intensive training and support provided by the CAS staff. Sites that lack such support may find implementing the program to be challenging and make changes as they see fit. Indeed, we observed variations in program implementation, and quality, across sites. To date, not enough time has elapsed e·lapse intr.v. e·lapsed, e·laps·ing, e·laps·es To slip by; pass: Weeks elapsed before we could start renovating. n. to assess which program components are most important; as more sites adopt the program, sufficient variations in implementation might allow such an analysis. Our study, however, clearly documents the effectiveness among females of a comprehensive program to prevent adolescent pregnancy adolescent pregnancy See Teenage pregnancy. . Although our analyses cannot determine the relative importance of the model's components, the philosophy, structure and specific staff roles may each contribute to the successful long-term relationships that a large proportion of the young people formed with the program and its staff. The CAS-Carrera philosophy emphasizes that working with young people is "a marathon, not a sprint"; the program design calls for "adopting" a group of young people and then sticking with them for several years. Adolescents who attend infrequently in·fre·quent adj. 1. Not occurring regularly; occasional or rare: an infrequent guest. 2. or only sporadically spo·rad·ic also spo·rad·i·cal adj. 1. Occurring at irregular intervals; having no pattern or order in time. See Synonyms at periodic. 2. Appearing singly or at widely scattered localities, as a plant or disease. and those who have ongoing behavioral behavioral pertaining to behavior. behavioral disorders see vice. behavioral seizure see psychomotor seizure. problems nonetheless remain part of the group. The program operates year-round, and staff are available even during nonprogram hours. All staff receive training and support in the program's overall philosophy, as well as in their specific responsibilities and tasks. Within the overall structure of the five activities and two services, the CAS-Carrera model looked for creative solutions when participants had trouble staying connected with the program. For example, although the Job Club component provides internships and summer jobs (along with classroom component involving discussions of job options and training in job readiness skills), some participants need to work even more hours than can be arranged through the Job Club. To solve the problem of attrition Attrition The reduction in staff and employees in a company through normal means, such as retirement and resignation. This is natural in any business and industry. Notes: caused by participants' need to work, CAS-Carrera program staff looked for jobs for them in the immediate program vicinity and developed some jobs within the agency housing the program. In this way, staff could maintain an ongoing relationship with adolescents who were unable to attend during scheduled hours. Although community organizers are rare in youth programming, their role appears to be an important one. These staff maintain regular and frequent contact with program youth and their families. Perhaps most important, community organizers give youth and families a continuous message that young people are noticed, valued and missed when they do not attend. Many youth programs take no action when adolescents do not attend. The data show that the program maintains long-term connections with young people and that this affects young women's risk of pregnancy directly by improving their sexual literacy, delaying initiation of intercourse and increasing their use of effective contraceptives. These outcomes reflect the dual role of the sexuality educator and reproductive health counselor. The group family life and sexuality education sessions provide information on abstinence abstinence: see fasting; temperance movements. , contraception, pregnancy, physiology and gender roles. Through these sessions, staff also develop a close relationship with young people, so they are well positioned to provide support and follow-up as young people make decisions about sex. Again, the model emphasizes a flexible approach; conversations between the sexuality educator and an adolescent are more likely to happen over a slice of pizza in the neighborhood than in a counseling room. While too few births occurred overall for meaningful analysis, ongoing follow-up data suggest that a difference between program and control women in the proportions who decide to carry pregnancies to term is emerging. Given program women's delays in initiating intercourse, their greater use of effective contraception and their lower pregnancy rates, there may soon be significantly fewer births among program than control females. The program effects were weaker among young men, perhaps in part because young men who had had intercourse before enrolling (i.e., very early in their teenage years) were the least likely to attend regularly. Strong social norms among these inner-city young men might also stress the benefits (or lack of negative consequences) of early sexual behavior sexual behavior A person's sexual practices–ie, whether he/she engages in heterosexual or homosexual activity. See Sex life, Sexual life. and parenthood. Finally, the female partners of male CAS-Carrera participants did not receive direct program support and services unless they were also enrolled. Perhaps the male participants could not, or did not, repeat the program messages to their partners. The data suggest that reaching young men sooner may strengthen outcomes at earlier ages; indeed, to achieve this goal, CAS has now implemented programs with 11- and 12-year-olds. (13) Although participation in a CAS-Carrera program did not significantly affect males' reproductive outcomes, important benefits emerged in their overall access to primary health care. At the three-year follow-up, program males (as well as females) had much better access to health care than control males. Finally, although program males' significantly higher rates of reproductive health care visits did not result in their causing fewer pregnancies, such improved access might have influenced young men's health Men's Health Definition Men's health is concerned with identifying, preventing, and treating conditions that are most common or specific to men. status in other ways. For example, increased use of reproductive health care services might have improved sexually transmitted infection prevention or resulted in earlier diagnosis and treatment, although the surveys did not ask directly about such infections. How do the pregnancy results from the CAS-Carrera model compare with those from other successful and well-evaluated pregnancy prevention programs? Although direct comparisons with all such programs are not possible, we compared our results with those from an evaluation of the community service-based program Teen Outreach. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. those results, after one year, the odds of pregnancy were 41% as high among program females as among controls; (14) our evaluation, in contrast, found that after three years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time odds of pregnancy were only 31% as high among CAS-Carrera females as among controls. How much does such a comprehensive program cost? At the New York City sites, costs averaged $4,000 per year for each teenager Teenager See also Adolescence. Ah, Wilderness! high-school senior has problems with girls and his father. [Am. Drama: O’Neill Ah, Wilderness! in Sobel, 15] Aldrich, Henry teenaged film character of the 1940s. [Am. enrolled, or about $16 a day (an amount that is less than what after-school child care would cost). These costs cover--for a program that operates 50 weeks a year, five and often six days a week--comprehensive medical and dental services; stipends for the hours spent in Job Club; and wages for work on entrepreneurial en·tre·pre·neur n. A person who organizes, operates, and assumes the risk for a business venture. [French, from Old French, from entreprendre, to undertake; see enterprise. and community service projects or internships (i.e., three dollars per hour for younger teenagers and minimum wage once adolescents qualify for working papers working papers pl.n. Legal documents certifying the right to employment of a minor or alien. Noun 1. working papers ). Costs for some line items are likely to be higher in New York City than in other parts of the country; for example, teachers who worked in the academic component as tutors were paid the union wage of $34 per hour. While some may find these costs alarming, deciding how much should be invested in young people is clearly a policy issue. Such program costs seem less daunting daunt tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay. [Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin , however, when they are viewed in juxtaposition juxtaposition /jux·ta·po·si·tion/ (-pah-zish´un) apposition. jux·ta·po·si·tion n. The state of being placed or situated side by side. with the costs that are avoided by preventing early pregnancies and promoting more positive behaviors. Our evaluation results allow the CAS-Carrera program to join the fewer than 10 others that have shown an impact on teenage pregnancy rates or birthrates. The program is one of only four for which evaluations based on random assignment have demonstrated an impact. While the CAS-Carrera model appears to have achieved success by building long-term relationships with participants, by delaying sexual intercourse and by encouraging effective method use, further analysis by participants' ethnicity and attendance levels should increase our understanding of what other factors might contribute to program success. Reducing teenage pregnancy is an important goal for the nation and for disadvantaged communities in particular. At least for the young women studied here, the CAS-Carrera program is a strategy that works.
TABLE 1. Percentage distribution of participants in an evaluation of
the CAS-Carrera pregnancy prevention program, by selected baseline
characteristics, according to gender and group assignment, New York
City, February-April 1997
Characteristic All
Program Control
(N=242) (N=242)
Age
13 39 32
14 37 38
15 24 30
Race/ethnicity
Black 60 52
Hispanic 39 45
Other 1 3
Socioeconomic indicators
Lives with employed adult and
receives no entitlements 39 35
Lives with unemployed adult
or receives entitlements 40 41
Lives with unemployed adult
and receives entitlements 21 24
Living arrangement
Both parents 35 33
Single parent 52 58
Neither parent 13 9
No. of parental risk factors ([dagger])
0 53 50
1 28 33
[greater than or equal to] 2 19 17
Previous participation in site's activities
Yes 43 46
No 57 54
Has paid job
Yes 32 35
No 68 65
Had health checkup in last year
Yes 85 86
No 15 14
Ever had sex
Yes 26 25
No 74 75
Total 100 100
Characteristic Female
Program Control
(N=130) (N=138)
Age
13 36 27
14 35 41
15 29 32
Race/ethnicity
Black 60 53
Hispanic 39 46
Other 1 1
Socioeconomic indicators
Lives with employed adult and
receives no entitlements 39 40
Lives with unemployed adult
or receives entitlements 40 37
Lives with unemployed adult
and receives entitlements 21 23
Living arrangement
Both parents 31 35
Single parent 57 58
Neither parent 12 7
No. of parental risk factors ([dagger])
0 53 47
1 28 33
[greater than or equal to] 2 19 20
Previous participation in site's activities
Yes 35 41
No 65 59
Has paid job
Yes 28 31
No 72 69
Had health checkup in last year
Yes 83 86
No 17 14
Ever had sex
Yes 15 20
No 85 80
Total 100 100
Characteristic Male
Program Control
(N=112) (N=104)
Age
13 43 38
14 39 34
15 18 28
Race/ethnicity
Black 59 52
Hispanic 39 44
Other 2 4
Socioeconomic indicators
Lives with employed adult and
receives no entitlements 39 29
Lives with unemployed adult
or receives entitlements 40 45
Lives with unemployed adult
and receives entitlements 21 26
Living arrangement
Both parents 43 31
Single parent 45 59
Neither parent 13 10
No. of parental risk factors ([dagger])
0 52 52
1 28 34
[greater than or equal to] 2 20 14
Previous participation in site's activities
Yes 51 53
No 49 47
Has paid job
Yes 37 39
No 63 61
Had health checkup in last year
Yes 88 85
No 12 15
Ever had sex
Yes 38 33
No 62 67
Total 100 100
([dagger]) These factors, reported by the adolescents, included
substance abuse, domestic violence, unemployment, illness,
incarceration and depression."
TABLE 2. Average number of hours teenagers spent in fall
and spring program activities over three years, by selected
characteristics, according to gender
Characteristic Total Female Male
Gender
Male 243 na 243
Female 242 242 na
Age
13 266 282 250
14 240 212 270
15 209 225 * 182
Race/ethnicity
Black 244 256 231
Hispanic 242 225 262
No. of social barriers at baseline ([dagger])
0-1 248 237 263
2 257 267 245
[greater than or equal to] 3 209 216 203
No. of delinquent behaviors at baseline ([double dagger])
0 243 233 259
1 238 240 234
[greater than or equal to] 2 248 263 238
Had sex before enrollment
Yes 178 203 ** 167
No 262 247 285
* p<.05. ** p<.01. ([dagger]) Social barriers include having friends
who engaged in three or more delinquent behaviors; having parents who
had experienced two or more of the selected problems listed in Table 1;
having a poor relationship with one's mother; living in an unsafe
neighborhood; having no relationship with a church or faith center;
and living in a household of low socioeconomic status.
([double dagger]) Delinquent behaviors include participating in
physical fights, carrying a weapon, using a weapon, stealing, being
arrested and damaging school property. Notes:
p-values denote significant differences by gender. na=not applicable.
TABLE 3. Change in knowledge, and percentage of teenagers reporting
selected sexual, reproductive and health care outcomes, all over three
years, by gender and group assignment
Outcome All
Program Control
Change in knowledge
% increase in correct responses to
knowledge questionnaire 22 11 ***
Sexual and reproductive
Chose not to have sex under pressure ([dagger]) na na
Ever had sex 63 72 *
Used condom and hormonal method
at last sex ([dagger]) 21 20
Used condom at last sex ([dagger]) 86 83
Became pregnant or caused
pregnancy 10 17 *
Gave birth ([double dagger]) or became a father 4 6
Health care
Received care from setting other than
emergency room 94 83 ***
Had medical checkup in last year 90 86
Received social assessment at last
checkup 58 42 ***
Had hepatitis B vaccination 86 74 **
Had dental checkup in last year 58 64
Received 4 or 5 of above services 69 54 ***
Made a reproductive health visit in
last year ([dagger]) 81 65 **
Outcome Females
Program Control
Change in knowledge
% increase in correct responses to
knowledge questionnaire 25 14 ***
Sexual and reproductive
Chose not to have sex under pressure ([dagger]) 75 36 *
Ever had sex 54 66 *
Used condom and hormonal method
at last sex ([dagger]) 36 20 *
Used condom at last sex ([dagger]) 84 75
Became pregnant or caused
pregnancy 10 22 **
Gave birth ([double dagger]) or became a father 3 10 *
Health care
Received care from setting other than
emergency room 98 91 *
Had medical checkup in last year 92 88
Received social assessment at last
checkup 52 50
Had hepatitis B vaccination 90 79 *
Had dental checkup in last year 61 63
Received 4 or 5 of above services 74 61 *
Made a reproductive health visit in
last year ([dagger]) 90 83
Outcome Males
Program Control
Change in knowledge
% increase in correct responses to
knowledge questionnaire 18 6 ***
Sexual and reproductive
Chose not to have sex under pressure ([dagger]) na na
Ever had sex 73 79
Used condom and hormonal method
at last sex ([dagger]) 9 20 *
Used condom at last sex ([dagger]) 88 92
Became pregnant or caused
pregnancy 11 10
Gave birth ([double dagger]) or became a father 4 1
Health care
Received care from setting other than
emergency room 90 72 ***
Had medical checkup in last year 88 85
Received social assessment at last
checkup 65 32 ***
Had hepatitis B vaccination 80 67 *
Had dental checkup in last year 54 64
Received 4 or 5 of above services 64 45 **
Made a reproductive health visit in
last year ([dagger]) 74 46 ***
* p< 05. ** p<.01. *** p<.001. ([dagger]) Asked of sexually experienced
adolescents only. ([double dagger]) These include two program and two
control females who, at the time of their interview, were in their
third trimester and intended to carry to term. Note: na=not applicable.
TABLE 4. Odds ratios from logistic regression analyses showing the
effects of selected variables on sexual, reproductive and health care
outcomes over three years, by gender
Variable Became Used condom
pregnant and hormonal
or caused method at
pregnancy last sex
Female Male Female Male
Group assignment
Program 0.31 ** 1.17 2.37 * 0.47
Control (ref) 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00
Had sex before enrollment
Yes 7.45 *** 4.13 ** 0.48 0.60
No (ref) 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00
Use of health care before
enrollment
Yes ([double dagger]) na na na na
No (ref) na na na na
Age 1.92 * 1.91 * 1.32 1.72
Race/ethnicity
Black 0.48 1.47 1.03 0.63
Hispanic (ref) 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00
No. of social barriers 1.04 1.60 0.76 1.28
Variable Currently Had 4 or 5
having sex of desirable
health care
outcomes ([dagger])
Female Male Female Male
Group assignment
Program 0.52 * 0.60 2.00 * 2.08 *
Control (ref) 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00
Had sex before enrollment
Yes 18.39 ** 24.08 ** na na
No (ref) 1.00 1.00 na na
Use of health care before
enrollment
Yes ([double dagger]) na na 1.71 ** 1.86 **
No (ref) na na 1.00 1.00
Age 1.70 ** 1.97 * 0.92 0.83
Race/ethnicity
Black 1.15 2.41 * 1.98 * 0.84
Hispanic (ref) 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00
No. of social barriers 1.54 ** 1.44 1.09 1.05
* p<.05. ** p<.01. *** p<.001. ([dagger]) These five outcomes are
having received medical care in a setting other than an emergency
room; having had a medical checkup in the last year; having been given
a social assessment at that checkup; having had a hepatitis B
vaccination; and having had a dental checkup in the last year.
([double dagger]) Denotes adolescents who reported not using the
emergency room for primary care, having had a medical checkup in the
last year and having had a dental checkup in the last year.
Notes: ref=reference category. na=not applicable, because we did not
consider it appropriate to include the "sex before enrollment" variable
in the equation predicting health care outcomes, or the "health care
before enrollment" variable in the equations predicting the
reproductive outcomes.
Acknowledgments Funding for this evaluation and for the programs serving as sites was provided by The Robin Hood Foundation The Robin Hood Foundation is a charitable organization which attempts to allieviate problems caused by poverty in New York City, New York. The Robin Hood Foundation was featured in Fortune Magazine's 18 September 2006 issue where the article states that the foundation is "one of . The authors wish to express their appreciation to the foundation and to the staff at the following program sites, whose program efforts and assistance in facilitating data collection made this evaluation possible: Citizens Advice Bureau A Citizens Advice Bureau (CAB) is one of a network of independent charities throughout the UK that give free, confidential information and advice to help people sort out their money, legal, consumer and other problems. , Grand Street Settlement, Jacob A. Riis Neighborhood Settlement House, Madison Square Madison Square is a neighborhood on the East Side of the New York City borough of Manhattan, centered on a 6.8 acre (2.75 Hectare) public park in the New York City borough of Manhattan, named for James Madison, fourth President of the United States and co-author of the United Boys and Girls boys and girls mercurialisannua. Club, New York City Mission Society and Project Reach Youth. Special gratitude Gratitude agrimony traditional symbol for gratitude. [Flower Symbolism: Flora Symbolica, 172] Androcles because he had once extracted a thorn from its paw, the lion refrained from attacking Androcles in the arena. [Rom. Lit. is extended to Michael Carrera, the originator Originator A bank, savings and loan, or mortgage banker that initially made a mortgage loan that is part of a pool. Also, an investment bank that has worked with the issuer of a new securities offering from the beginning and is usually appointed manager of the underwriting and nurturer of these programs. * We defined adolescents' relationship with their mother as poor if they felt that their mother did not spend enough time with them, they did not share ideas or important decisions with their mother or they felt that their mother did not listen to them. REFERENCES (1.) Singh S For the fictional global crime syndicate, see . Singh is a Sanskrit word meaning "lion". It is used as a common surname and middle name in North India by many communities, especially by the Sikhs and the Rajputs. and Darroch JE, Adolescent pregnancy and childbearing: levels and trends in developed countries, Family Planning family planning Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources. Perspectives, 2000, 32(1):14-23. (2.) Hawkins JD et al., Preventing adolescent health-risk behaviors by strengthening protection during childhood, Archives of Pediatrics pediatrics (pēdēă`trĭks), branch of medicine dedicated to the attainment of the best physical, emotional, and social health for infants, children, and young people generally. & Adolescent Medicine adolescent medicine n. The branch of medicine concerned with the treatment of youth between 13 and 21 years of age. Also called ephebiatrics, hebiatrics. , 1999, 153(3):226-234. (3.) Campbell FA, Long-term outcomes from the Abecedarian study, paper presented at the biennial biennial, plant requiring two years to complete its life cycle, as distinguished from an annual or a perennial. In the first year a biennial usually produces a rosette of leaves (e.g., the cabbage) and a fleshy root, which acts as a food reserve over the winter. meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development, Albuquerque, NM, Apr. 16, 1999. (4.) Vincent ML, Clearie AF and Schluchter MD, Reducing adolescent pregnancy through school and community-based education, Journal of the American Medical Association JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association is an international peer-reviewed general medical journal, published 48 times per year by the American Medical Association. JAMA is the most widely circulated medical journal in the world. , 1987, 257(24):3382-3386. (5.) Koo HP et al., Reducing adolescent pregnancy through a school- and community-based intervention: Denmark, South Carolina Denmark is a city in Bamberg County, South Carolina, United States. The population was 3,328 at the 2000 census. Geography Denmark is located at (33.321173, -81.142289)GR1. , revisited, Family Planning Perspectives, 1994, 26(5):206-211 & 217. (6.) Grossman J and Pepper S, Plain Talk and Adolescent Sexual Behavior
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