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Promoting teen-to-teen contraceptive communication with the SpeakOut intervention, a cluster randomized trial.

Authors :
Tebb, Kathleen P
Tebb, Kathleen P
Dehlendorf, Christine
Rodriguez, Felicia
Fix, Margaret
Tancredi, Daniel J
Reed, Reiley
Brindis, Claire D
Schwarz, Eleanor Bimla
Tebb, Kathleen P
Tebb, Kathleen P
Dehlendorf, Christine
Rodriguez, Felicia
Fix, Margaret
Tancredi, Daniel J
Reed, Reiley
Brindis, Claire D
Schwarz, Eleanor Bimla
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

ObjectivesTo improve teen contraceptive use, the SpeakOut intervention combines structured counseling, online resources, and text reminders to encourage teens to share their experiences using intrauterine contraception (IUC) or an implant with peers.Study designTo evaluate the effectiveness of remote delivery of the SpeakOut intervention in increasing teen contraceptive use, we conducted a cluster randomized trial involving female adolescents who were recruited online. Primary participants (n = 520) were randomly assigned to receive SpeakOut or an attention control; each primary participant recruited a cluster of up to 5 female peers as secondary participants (n = 581). We assessed contraceptive communication, knowledge, and use, at baseline, 3 and 9 months after participants enrolled. We examined differences between study groups, controlling for clustering by primary participant and baseline characteristics.ResultsThe trial's primary outcome, contraceptive use by secondary participants, was similar between groups at both 3 and 9 months postintervention. Compared to controls, primary participants receiving SpeakOut tended to be less likely to discontinue contraception within 9 months (4.8% vs 7.8%, p = 0.11 for IUC; 7.8% vs 9.8%, p = 0.45 for implants), but this did not reach statistical significance. SpeakOut failed to increase contraceptive communication; regardless of study group, most secondary participants reported peer communication about contraception (86% vs 88%, p = 0.57). Most secondary participants were aware of the hormonal IUC (91.4% vs 90.4%, p = 0.72), copper IUC (92.9% vs 88.6%, p = 0.13), and implant (96.5% vs 96.1%, p = 0.83) 3 months after enrolling, regardless of the intervention their primary participant received. However, contraceptive knowledge remained incomplete in all study groups.ConclusionRemote delivery of the SpeakOutintervention did not improve contraceptiv

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391567323
Document Type :
Electronic Resource