Cocreating First Steps, a Toolkit to Improve Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Services:以人为中心的定性设计研究,针对纽约市的西班牙裔和黑人青少年母亲。

IF 2.1 Q2 PEDIATRICS JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting Pub Date : 2024-11-19 DOI:10.2196/60692
Lauren Gerchow, Yzette Lanier, Anne-Laure Fayard, Allison Squires
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:青少年的声音经常被排除在性与生殖健康(SRH)研究之外。尽管有进步的政策和获得性与生殖健康护理的机会,但纽约市生活在贫困社区的青少年以及那些被认定为黑人或西班牙裔的青少年在性与生殖健康方面的结果很差,包括意外怀孕率和性传播感染率都很高:本定性研究旨在指导黑人和西班牙裔青少年母亲确定性健康和生殖健康护理中的问题领域,并根据医疗保健利益相关者的意见共同制定医疗服务建议,以解决这些问题并改善性健康和生殖健康体验:方法:通过人种学访谈方法,纽约市的未成年母亲分享了她们从怀孕前到为人父母的经历,并指出了青少年性健康和生殖健康服务和教育中的问题所在。采用情景分析法对数据进行归纳分析。青少年参与者参加了两场 "共同创造 "研讨会。在第一次研讨会上,他们确认了访谈结果,确定了优先事项,并创建了粗略的原型。第一次研讨会后,对医疗服务提供者进行了访谈,为完善粗略原型提供信息。在第二次共同创造研讨会上,青少年们进一步开发了原型,并对由此产生的工具包进行了命名:共有 16 位未成年母亲参加了 47 次访谈,10 位(63%)参加者至少参加了一次共同创造研讨会。她们强调了性健康教育的不足之处,并强调了医疗保健提供者和家长而非学校在改善性健康教育方面的作用。青少年参与者为青少年和医疗服务提供者设计了建议,以支持青少年、家长和医疗服务提供者之间进行高质量的对话,并制作了一份预约前清单,帮助年轻患者主动与医疗服务提供者进行对话。年轻的参与者强调,性教育应涉及性传播感染和怀孕以外的话题,如情感健康和人际关系。他们为医疗服务提供者制定了指导方针,概述了沟通策略,以提供尊重、公正的医疗服务和避孕咨询,鼓励青少年自主。与会者分享了如何以尊重的态度支持年轻父母的具体建议。医疗保健相关人员建议增加有关保密护理的信息;为女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人和同性恋青年提供支持;将重点放在改善医疗保健提供者与患者之间的沟通上,而不是制作教育材料。在第二次研讨会上,青少年与会者根据医疗保健利益相关者的反馈意见对原型进行了修改,并将建议工具包命名为 "第一步":本研究强调了家长和医护人员在青少年性健康教育中的重要作用。共同设计的工具包为医疗服务提供者提供了一种实用的方法,让青少年及其父母参与到有意义的、以青少年为中心的对话中来,从而促进健康、安全和幸福。
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Cocreating First Steps, a Toolkit to Improve Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Services: Qualitative Human-Centered Design Study With Hispanic and Black Adolescent Mothers in New York City.

Background: Adolescent voices are frequently excluded from sexual and reproductive health (SRH) research. Despite progressive policies and access to SRH care, adolescents in New York City who live in neighborhoods with high poverty and those who identify as Black or Hispanic experience poor SRH outcomes, including high rates of unplanned pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections.

Objective: This qualitative study aims to guide Black and Hispanic adolescent mothers in identifying problem areas in SRH care and cocreate health service recommendations with input from health care stakeholders to address those problems and improve SRH experiences.

Methods: Through ethnographic interview methods, adolescent mothers in New York City shared their experiences from before pregnancy through parenting and identified problem areas in adolescent SRH services and education. Data were analyzed inductively and using situational analysis. Adolescent participants attended 2 cocreation workshops. In the first workshop, they confirmed interview findings, set priorities, and created rough prototypes. Following the first workshop, health care providers were interviewed to inform refinement of the rough prototypes. Adolescents further developed prototypes in the second cocreation workshop and named the resulting toolkit.

Results: A total of 16 adolescent mothers participated in 47 interviews, and 10 (63%) participants attended at least 1 cocreation workshop. They highlighted deficiencies in sexual health education and emphasized the roles of health care providers and parents, rather than schools, in improving it. Adolescent participants designed recommendations for adolescents and health care providers to support quality conversations between adolescents, parents, and health care providers and created a preappointment checklist to help young patients initiate conversations with health care providers. Young participants stressed that sex education should address topics beyond sexually transmitted infections and pregnancy, such as emotional health and relationships. They created guidelines for health care providers outlining communication strategies to provide respectful, unbiased care and contraceptive counseling that encourages adolescent autonomy. Participants shared specific suggestions for how to support young parents respectfully. Health care stakeholders recommended adding information on confidential care; supporting lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer youth; and focusing on improving communication between health care providers and patients rather than creating educational materials. In the second workshop, adolescent participants revised the prototypes based on feedback from health care stakeholders and named the toolkit of recommendations First Steps.

Conclusions: This study highlighted the important roles that parents and health care workers play in adolescent sexual health education. Cocreated toolkits offer a practical approach for health care providers to engage adolescents and their parents in meaningful, adolescent-centered conversations that can promote health, safety, and well-being.

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来源期刊
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
5.40%
发文量
62
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊最新文献
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