12 research outputs found

    Lucky Girls: Unintentional Avoidance of Adolescent Pregnancy Among Low-Income African-American Females

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    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.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73296/1/j.1744-6155.2002.tb00171.x.pd

    Neighborhood Factors Relevant for Walking in Older, Urban, African American Adults

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    Focus-group and photo-voice methodology were used to identify the salient factors of the neighborhood environment that encourage or discourage walking in older, urban African Americans. Twenty-one male (n = 2) and female (n = 19) African Americans age 60 years and older (M = 70 ± 8.7, range = 61–85) were recruited from a large urban senior center. Photographs taken by the participants were used to facilitate focus-group discussions. The most salient factors that emerged included the presence of other people, neighborhood surroundings, and safety from crime, followed by sidewalk and traffic conditions, animals, public walking tracks and trails, and weather. Future walking interventions for older African Americans should include factors that encourage walking, such as the presence of other friendly or active people, attractive or peaceful surroundings, and a sense of safety from crime

    What are we missing? Risk behaviors among Arabâ American adolescents and emerging adults

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    Background and purposeResearch on Arabâ Americans as a distinct ethnic group is limited, especially when considering the health of Arabâ American youth. This study describes health risk (substance use, violence); health promotive behaviors (hope, spirituality); and sexual activity (oral, vaginal, anal sex) of Arabâ American adolescents and emerging adults (aged 15â 23) within their life context, as well as the association between these behaviors.MethodsA secondary analysis of data on a subset of Arabâ American participants obtained from a randomizedâ control trial was utilized to conduct mixed methods analyses. Qualitative analyses completed on the openâ ended questions used the constant comparative method for a subsample (n = 24) of participants. Descriptive quantitative analyses of survey data utilized bivariate analyses and stepwise logistic regression to explore the relation between risk behaviors and sexual activity among the full sample (n = 57).ConclusionsQualitative analyses revealed two groups of participants: (a) multiple risk behaviors and negative lifeâ events, and (b) minimal risk behaviors and positive lifeâ events. Quantitative analyses indicated older youth, smokers, and those with higher hope pathways were more likely to report vaginal sex.Implications for practiceThe unique cultural and social contexts of Arabâ American youth provide a framework for recommendations for the prevention of risk behaviors.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134166/1/jaan12352.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134166/2/jaan12352_am.pd

    Modifiable influences on female HPV vaccine uptake at the clinic encounter level: A literature review

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    Purpose A review of the literature to identify modifiable influences on female human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine uptake relevant to clinical practice in order to support nurse practitioners (NPs) in the prevention of cervical cancer. Data sources PubMed, CINAHL, reference lists of publications that surfaced in the electronic search. Conclusions Six influences are modifiable and potentially amenable to being addressed at the clinic encounter level: (a) cost and insurance coverage, (b) provider recommendation, (c) vaccination opportunity, (d) HPV and HPV vaccine knowledge, (e) vaccine safety concerns, and (f) HPV risk. Implications for practice NPs have an important role in improving HPV vaccine uptake and research suggests several areas they can address to increase vaccination during clinic visits.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108355/1/jaan12057.pd

    Comparing White and Asian American Adolescents’ Perceived Parental Expectations and Their Sexual Behaviors

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    While parental influences on adolescent health behaviors are well recognized, there is limited understanding of the relationship between adolescents’ perceptions of their parents’ expectations and their sexual behaviors. This mixed-methods study explored how White and Asian American adolescents perceive parental expectations via parent–child interactions, and how such expectations relate to adolescents’ self-reported sexual activities over time. Using gender-matched, in-depth interviews with 28 White and Asian American adolescents, ages 17 to 19, we explored adolescents’ perceptions of parental expectations about when, how, and under what conditions adolescents should engage in sexual activity. Stronger conservative parental sexual expectations and disapproving parental attitudes were closely related to later sexual debut and fewer sexual partners. Perceived closeness determined the degree to which adolescents respected and incorporated their parents’ beliefs, values, and sexual expectations. Future research should focus on developing family strategies to utilize the concept of perceived parental expectations
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