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  • Title: Comprehensive school-based health clinics: a growing movement to improve adolescent health and reduce teen-age pregnancy.
    Author: Kirby D.
    Journal: J Sch Health; 1986 Sep; 56(7):289-91. PubMed ID: 3640130.
    Abstract:
    The lack of needed health care and the number of unintended pregnancies among young people in the U.S. have caused many schools to increase the scope of their health services in the past 2 decades. Beginning in the 1970s, some communities also responded to that need with more comprehensive health clinics. By August of 1986, the Support Center for School-Based Clinics at the Center for Population Options had identified more than 60 comprehensive clinics in the U.S. having the characteristics identified in this discussion. Locations of these clinics include Chicago, Kansas City, St. Paul, and West Dallas. These comprehensive health centers provide direct comprehensive primary care, prescribe and/or dispense medications, provide family planning and other services related to sexuality, commonly are operated by established medical providers rather than the schools, and are staffed by nurse practitioners and physicians. These comprehensive centers represent the next step in an evolutionary process of improving adolescent health care in the schools. The Support Center for School-Based clinics collected questionnaire data on the clinics. Most of the comprehensive clinics offer a variety of services. All of the clinics facilitate family planning and minimally provide counseling about sexual activity and birth control, make referrals, and engage in follow-up activities. Direct management of all but 1 clinic is by nonschool agencies. Most clinics strongly encourage patients to discuss any health problems as well as sexual decisions with their parents. Virtually all clinics obtain written consent from parents before students receive medical services. According to the providers, the location of clinics in schools offers many advantages, including: each clinic is accessible and familiar; because the clinic is strictly an adolescent clinic, it can hire staff that like adolescents and are skilled at working with adolescents; many clinic services are consolidated; and the clinics can treat the whole person in an integrated way. Clinic records show the percentage of female students receiving family planning services to have increased from 0% to about 27%, and the 12-month and 24-month contraception continuation rates were 93% and 82% (based on 1982).
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