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Physicians as Advocates for Adolescent Reproductive Health. Adolescents Need Physicians to Advocate on Their Behalf. Adolescents Need Physicians to Advocate on Their Behalf. Adolescence is a unique time in life requiring special attention Characterized by:
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Adolescents Need Physicians to Advocate on Their Behalf • Adolescence is a unique time in life requiring special attention • Characterized by: • Physical, emotional, and developmental changes • Emerging sexuality • Awareness of gender identification and sexual orientation
Factors Shaping Adolescence Race Ethnicity Religion Socio-economic status Peers Family
Advocacy Can Improve Adolescent Health • The major causes of adolescent morbidity and mortality are preventable • Physician advocacy can address the factors that contribute to negative health outcomes
What Is Advocacy? • Definition: • Application of information and resources • The action of advocating, pleading for, or supporting a cause or proposal
Placing educational literature in your office space to educate and inform patients Developing a community health behavior change program that addresses STIs among youth Examples of Advocacy
Examples of Advocacy • Giving expert testimony to the local school board regarding comprehensive sex education • Writing a letter to a national or local newspaper regarding risk factors for teen pregnancy • Testifying before Congress to advocate for expanded Medicaid coverage for contraception
Why Should Providers Become Advocates? • Physicians are leaders in the community • It is a residency requirement
Steps to Advocating for Adolescents • Identify a need • Assess Community Resources • Choose a level of advocacy
Identify a Healthcare Need • A healthcare need may be a: • Risk factor • Screening finding • Disease symptom • Condition or disease diagnosis • Consequence of a disease
Example: Teen Pregnancy • Unintended teen pregnancy is a public health concern • Healthy People 2010 goal: “Reduce pregnancies among adolescent females” • Teen pregnancy isn’t an isolated problem and should be viewed in the context of • Poverty • Barriers to health care and education
Teen Pregnancy Rates Worldwide, 2000 Per 1000
Reevaluating Risks of Teen Pregnancy and Parenting • Teen Pregnancy: Cause for Concern? • Unintended pregnancies can prove challenging regardless of age • Research indicates poor outcomes for teen parents and their children • Health of teen mothers and infants • Educational outcomes • Highlights complexity with multiple factors contributing to outcomes
Outcomes for Teen Mothers • Lesslikelyto • Receive adequate prenatal care • Graduate from high school • Morelikelyto • Die in childbirth • Be poor as adults • Have symptoms of depression • Lack resources to foster their children’s development
Challenges for Teen Fathers • Poor academic performance • Higher school dropout rates • Limited financial resources • Decreased income capacity • Difficulties staying involved in children’s lives
Educational Achievement And Poverty • Unintended pregnancy can disrupt education • Poverty may be a stronger factor in educational disparities than early pregnancy • Low-income women have poor educational outcomes • Low-income teen mothers no different than counterparts who delay parenting until > 20
Addressing Teen Pregnancy Teen Pregnancy Can Be Addressed on Several Levels Condition antecedents Symptomatic condition Complication • Providing access to contraceptives and condoms • Educating patients on prevention • Ensuring improved prenatal care • Reduction in substance use and risk behaviors • Providing parenting skills training • Enabling continued maternal education
Choosing an Area of Focus • Sexually Education • Do local schools provide comprehensive sexuality education? • After-school programs • Are there programs in your community to keep teens active and involved after school? • Condom and contraceptive accessibility • Are condoms and contraceptives available confidentially? If not, how can you play a role in filling these voids?
On which level will you choose to advocate? Practice Community Media Legislative and Policy
Practice Choosing a Level of Advocacy • Identify your office as a safe space • Conduct a comprehensive patient interview, assessing risk behavior and providing medically factual information to counter myths • Have resources available to help patients navigate insurance, Medicaid, and billing process
What Do You Need to Know? • Be aware of state laws regarding minors’ legal rights to comprehensive care • Be knowledgeable about local resources for referrals to provide services beyond the scope of your practice
Choosing a Level of Advocacy Community • Steps to providing community oriented primary care • Assessing community capacity • Identifying health priorities • Assessing population readiness • Develop Intervention • Evaluation
Why Is Defining theCommunity Vital? Community • Adolescent reproductive health indicators differ by region, state, city, and community • It is crucial to tailor interventions to the needs of community members
Assessing Community Resources Community • Identify programs and local, faith based, and/or national organizations that have the potential to improve reproductive health • Directly or indirectly: • Reduce risk factors • Enhance protective factors
Assessing Capacity Community • Community capacity is a comprehensive set of data that can be used to set objectives • Assessment may include: • Compilation of demographic data from census records • Results of surveys conducted by others • Responses by partnership members to questions about the community they serve • Focus group discussions, interviews with stakeholders
Community-Oriented Intervention Community • Develop intervention based on: • Community Assessment • Community Partners and Resources • Personal and Organization Resources and Abilities • Even the simplest intervention can make a difference!
Evaluation Community • Decide specific measures of success based on community assessment and intervention initiative • Baseline • Measures • Targets • Outcomes
Choosing a Level of Advocacy Media • The media can: • Get the attention of community/laypersons, colleagues/institutions, and policymakers • Offer opportunities to provide scientifically sound and accurate information • Disseminate research
Print Media Media • Newspapers • Op-Ed (700–800 words) • Letters to the Editor (250–300 words) • Newsletters • Agencies, • nonprofit organizations • professional associations • hospitals • Journals • Letters to the Editor • Editorial • Web-Based • Magazines • Health column • Letters • Opinion pieces
Broadcast Media Media • Television • Radio • Internet • Niche Media • Spanish-Language Stations • LGBT Media
Planning the Message Media • Clearly highlight a discrete problem • Provide a narrow solution • Prepare sound bites • Prepare a brief summary of information that you want to convey
Disseminating the Message Media • Contact the media • Call the newsroom at your local paper and find out how to submit a letter or Op-Ed • Join a national advocacy organization, such as Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health, and identify yourself as able and willing to talk to the media
Choosing a Level of Advocacy Legislation and Policy • Your knowledge and expertise can be used in a number of ways, including: • Providing oral or written testimony at hearings or other public forums • Educating legislators and their staff members • Following up when information is requested from you • Thanking legislators who vote in a manner with which you agree
Approaching Policymakers Legislation and Policy • Introduce yourself as a healthcare provider • Explain the overall purpose of your communication and why specifically you are bringing this issue to their attention
The Realities of Politics Legislation and Policy • No decision by a legislator is straightforward • Legislators need to balance competing interests
Meeting With Legislators’ Staff Legislation and Policy • Know the details of the issue the best • Significant influence on the legislator • More likely to give helpful information • Deserve equal respect • Don’t be disappointed
Share Personal Experiences Legislation and Policy • Highlight how this legislation would affect: • Your work as a healthcare provider • The lives of your patients • Public health in general
Communicating with Legislators Legislation and Policy • Know what you want to accomplish • Prior to the meeting • With your testimony • From your letter • Develop talking points • Stick to them
Communicating with Legislators Legislation and Policy • Keep it simple • Implications of the bill • Reasons for your views • Avoid technical medical explanations • Be patient, positive, and flexible • Be clear and concise • Follow up
Your Legislator’s Stance • Solidly in support of your issue • Mixed on your issue • Entirely opposed to your issue Legislation and Policy
Supportive Legislators • Thank the legislator • Mention recent votes or comments the legislator made about your issue and how much you (and your patients) appreciate this support • Express the importance of the legislation • Reaffirm the importance of vocal legislators Legislation and Policy
Mixed Level of Support • Focus on a specific piece of legislation • Remember your goal: passage or elimination of one bill • Stress the medical necessity and benefits to the medical community and patients • Reaffirm the importance of vocal legislators Legislation and Policy
Opposition Stance • Acknowledge the legislator’s point of view • Highlight aspects of the legislation that would best influence the legislator’s vote • Highlight the medical and scientific facts • Emphasize how the bill would secure the health of your patients • Use logic to combat any emotionally charged language or reasoning Legislation and Policy
How Can Physicians Advocate? • Ask questions and get involved • Organize and speak out when necessary • Push for stronger standards of care for reproductive health services in your practice and institution • Contact the media; write a letter to the editor for the local newspaper • Write to or visit your public officials • Get involved with your medical association and Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health!
Provider Resources: • Resources: • www.prch.org - Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health • www.aap.org - The American Academy of Pediatrics • www.acog.org - The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists • www.adolescenthealth.org - The Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine • www.aclu.org/reproductiverights/ - The Reproductive Freedom Project of the American Civil Liberties Union • www.advocatesforyouth.org – Advocates for Youth • www.guttmacher.org – Guttmacher Institute • www.cahl.org/ - Center for Adolescent Health and the Law • www.gynob.emory.edu - The Jane Fonda Center of Emory University • www.siecus.org - The Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States • www.arhp.org - The Association of Reproductive Health Professionals
Provider Resources: • PRCH’s Minors’ Access to Confidential Reproductive Healthcare Cards and Emergency Contraception: A Practitioner’s Guide • ARHP Reproductive Health Model Curriculum • AMA Guidelines for Adolescent Preventive Services (GAPS) • The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists: • Confidentiality in Adolescent Health Care • Primary and Preventive Health Care for Female Adolescents • Tool Kit for Teen Care—available at: • http://www.acog.org/bookstore/Tool_Kit_for_Teen_Care_P348C84.cfm • Info on emergency contraception, www.not-2-late.org
Provider Resources • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines 2002: www.cdc.gov/std/treatment/rr5106.pdf • Building Emergency Contraception Awareness Among Adolescents, A ToolKit, Academy for Educational Development: http://www.aed.org/Publications/upload/ECtoolkit3283.pdf • Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation: public health policy, broken down by area (e.g., reproductive, state-specific, Medicaid, HIV/AIDS): www.kff.org. • The Young Men’s Clinic of Columbia University: http://www.cumc.columbia.edu/dept/sph/popfam/ • Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center: http://www.mountsinai.org/msh/msh_program.jsp?url=clinical_services/ahc.htm