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Improving access to and use of contraception by adolescents: What progress has been made, what lessons have been learnt, and what are the implications for action?

Venkatraman Chandra‐Mouli, Elsie Akwara

2020Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology144 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article sets out the progress that has been made in reducing levels of adolescent childbearing and in meeting adolescent contraceptive needs, over the last 25 years, and also makes the public health, economic, and human rights rationale for continued attention to and investment in these areas. Using an analytic framework that covers the perspectives of both the use and the provision of contraception, it examines the factors that make it difficult for adolescents to obtain and use contraceptives to avoid unintended pregnancies, and outlines what could be done to address these factors, drawing from research evidence and programmatic experience. In doing this, the article provides concrete examples from low- and middle-countries that have made tangible progress in these areas.

Topics & Concepts

Action (physics)Family planningInvestment (military)Adolescent healthDeveloped countryPublic relationsUnintended consequencesUnintended pregnancyMedicineEconomic growthPolitical sciencePsychologyPopulationResearch methodologyEnvironmental healthNursingEconomicsLawQuantum mechanicsPhysicsPoliticsGlobal Maternal and Child HealthAdolescent Sexual and Reproductive HealthPoverty, Education, and Child Welfare
Improving access to and use of contraception by adolescents: What progress has been made, what lessons have been learnt, and what are the implications for action? | Litcius