Lucky girls: unintentional avoidance of adolescent pregnancy among low-income African-American females.
نویسندگان
چکیده
PURPOSE To describe lucky adolescents who unintentionally avoid pregnancy. DESIGN AND METHODS The second phase of a descriptive qualitative study in which 17 low-income African-American females ages 19 to 26 participated in open-ended interviews on how they avoided pregnancy as adolescents. RESULTS Constant comparative analysis revealed that five of the girls avoided pregnancy because they were "lucky" that others insisted they use contraceptives. These lucky girls were unaware of sexual risks, but used contraceptives because they complied with decisions made by their parents, grandparents, and partners. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Lucky girls are at risk for adolescent pregnancy because they abdicate decision making to others and are likely to be overlooked in practice because they are using contraceptives. Promoting self-protection includes assessment, knowledge, skills-building strategies, and health-promoting contracts between the nurse and adolescent.
منابع مشابه
Predictors of inconsistent contraceptive use among adolescent girls: findings from a prospective study.
PURPOSE To assess the independent effects of various behavioral and psychosocial antecedents on contraceptive use among a sample of low-income African-American adolescent females. METHODS Stepwise logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios for baseline predictors of inconsistent contraceptive use six months later. Study participants include 375 nonpregnant African-American girls ag...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Journal for specialists in pediatric nursing : JSPN
دوره 7 4 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2002