Abstract
Background: This study examines contraception choices among Hispanic and non-Hispanic girls, to determine if there are differences when the barrier of cost is removed by facilitating enrollment in a Title X Family Planning Program.
Methods: Charts of adolescent females aged 13–19 years, seen for the first time at a university hospital clinic from January 1, 2005 to December 31, 2007, were reviewed. Access to contraception was facilitated by enrollment in the Title X Family Planning Program. Patients were categorized as public insurance if they had Medicaid or Child/Family Health Plus or chose to enroll in the Title X program.
Results: Among the 666 eligible patients, 27% were Hispanic, with a mean age of 14.9 years. At least 20% had used one form of contraception before their first clinic visit. About one-third of the youth were enrolled in the Title X Family Planning Program, with no statistical difference between Hispanic and non-Hispanic youth. Three hundred and ninety subjects (58%) chose contraception during their visit. Hispanic subjects, who represented 32% of the group, were more likely to choose condoms and oral contraceptive pills compared to non-Hispanic subjects. The privately insured adolescents chose condoms less often than the publicly insured adolescents, and this was true regardless of ethnicity.
Conclusion: There are significant differences in contraception choices between Hispanic and non-Hispanic youth. The Title X Family Planning Program allowed young women to make independent choices. Adolescents may benefit from further improvements in culturally sensitive family planning programs.
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- Masthead
- Editorial
- Unintentional death in childhood and adolescence
- Review
- Detached, distraught or discerning? Fathers of adolescents with chronic illness: a review of the literature
- Original Articles
- Perception of transition readiness and preferences for use of technology in transition programs: teens’ ideas for the future
- Adaptation of an internet-based depression prevention intervention for Chinese adolescents: from “CATCH-IT” to “grasp the opportunity”
- Smaller pelvic size in pregnant adolescents contributes to lower birth weight
- R620W polymorphism of protein tyrosine phosphatase PTPN22 in Egyptian children and adolescents with systemic lupus erythematosus: relation to thyroid autoimmunity
- Motivational stage of change in young patients undergoing day treatment for eating disorders
- Leveraging microfinance to impact HIV and financial behaviors among adolescents and their mothers in West Bengal: a cluster randomized trial
- Patterns of contraception choice among Hispanic and non-Hispanic female adolescents
- Translation of children’s cycling into steps: the share of cycling in 10-year-olds’ physical activity
- Weight gain in an eating disorders day program
- Case Report
- Weight loss as a result of religious zeal in young Orthodox Jewish males