1 / 17

Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents

Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents. Don Langille, MD Professor Department of Community Health & Epidemiology. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents. Most adolescent primary care delivered by physicians.

bette
Download Presentation

Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents Don Langille, MD Professor Department of Community Health & Epidemiology

  2. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents • Most adolescent primary care delivered by physicians. • Care for emotional problems, substance use and high risk sexual behaviours is particularly important. • Care should include opportunistic screening. • Adolescent access (and use) is a key challenge & SBHCs are a response to this.

  3. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents • Availability • Accessibility • Applicability • Equity • Acceptability

  4. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents: Availability • Services are generally available in developed countries. • May be limited by policy considerations (e.g., ECP in the US). • Individual providers may limit availability of specific services (e.g., abortion).

  5. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents: Accessibility • Cost • Convenience factors (hours of operation, distance, transport) • Lack of knowledge of services offered

  6. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents: Applicability • Are services offered able to meet the needs of students? • Establish these through appropriate needs assessment and ongoing review.

  7. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents: Equity • Lack of health insurance • Refusal of service based on life circumstances (e.g., young people living on the street)

  8. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents: Acceptability • Fear of being seen at a health facility • Lack of respect for young peoples’ health related decisions • Poor provider communication • Main issue is around parents finding out about a visit for health services (confidentiality)

  9. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents: Confidentiality Concerns about confidentiality can cause adolescents to: • Delay seeking help • Affect choice of provider • Affect candour in responding to sensitive questions • Forego seeking help completely

  10. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents: Confidentiality A US study published (Ford et al, JAMA, 1999) found that of students who had forgone needed health care 11.5% (95% CI 10.0-13.0) had done so because they didn’t want their parents to know.

  11. Barriers to Health Services for Adolescents: Confidentiality • A recent study (Lehrer et al, JAH 2007) found that boys with confidentiality concern as a reason for foregoing care were more at risk of depression, suicidal ideation and suicide attempt. • Girls with confidentiality concerns had had more STI, depression and suicide ideation/attempt, and lacked contraception.

  12. Confidentiality & Sexual Health Services 1997 Commonwealth Fund Survey of Health of Adolescent Girls, a nationally representative school-based survey of 6748 girls in grades 5-12(Klein, JAH, 1999) • 1/3 had missed needed care • Most common reason for missing care was not wanting parents to know

  13. Confidentiality & Sexual Health Services Reddy et al (JAMA, 2002) asked 1118 females aged <18 at Wisconsin Planned Parenthood clinics about the impact of parent notification. • 47% would stop using all PP services if parents were notified about OC use. • 6% would delay STI treatment if there were mandatory parental notification. • Authors concluded that such notification had potential to harm girls’ sexual health.

  14. Confidentiality & Sexual Health Services Jones et al (JAMA, 2005), using a sample of 80 publicly funded FP clinic in the US, asked women <18 (n=1526) seeking sexual health services how they would react if parent notification were mandatory: • 59% overall would use services. • Only 29% of the 40% whose parents were currently unaware would do so.

  15. Confidentiality & Sexual Health Services Student survey in northern Nova Scotia (Langille, 2001). Proportions of sexually active students (n=650) not having discussed sexual health with a physician due to: Males Females Embarrassment 37 56 Might tell parents 23 54 Lack of respect 21 41

  16. Confidentiality & Sexual Health Services Student survey in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia (Langille, 2007). Proportions of sexually active students (both sexes, n=379) giving reasons for first attendance: More comfortable at SBHC 63 Confidentiality maintained 63 Appropriate info available 60 Nurse non-judgmental 55

  17. Confidentiality & Sexual Health Services For Discussion: What strategies can be used to assure that issues of confidentiality are fully addressed at SBHCs?

More Related