Feasibility study of a health coaching intervention to improve contraceptive continuation in adolescent and young adult women in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health Pub Date : 2021-09-01 Epub Date: 2022-03-24 DOI:10.1363/psrh.12188
Aletha Y Akers, Ava Skolnik, Gabrielle DiFiore, Jennifer Harding, C Alix Timko
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In this special report, we describe the rationale for using health coaching, conceptual framework, intervention processes, and findings from a single-arm feasibility study of the intervention protocol.</p><p><strong>Methodology: </strong>Health coaching is a person-centered behavioral change approach organized around five main strategies: providing education relevant to health goals, building health self-management skills, offering patient-centered counseling, identifying barriers to adherence, and fostering personal accountability for achieving health goals. We used these strategies to affect theory-driven mediators delineated in the Integrative Model of Behavioral Prediction (intentions, knowledge, attitudes, perceived social norms, and self-efficacy) and clinical mediators posited to change through program participation (shared contraceptive decision-making, method satisfaction, quality of life, distress tolerance, experiential avoidance, patient-coach alliance, and expectations of treatment effect). Experienced sexual health educators completed a manualized, 4-week health training program adapted from the National Society of Health Coaches. Between March and December 2017, we recruited a convenience sample of sexually-active women ages 14-21 years who initiated a new contraceptive in the prior 14 days from three urban pediatric clinics in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. At baseline, participants completed a socio-demographic questionnaire, contraceptive needs assessment interview, and prioritized reproductive topics to learn more about. 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Most were Black (n = 24), in high school (n = 23), and single/never-married (n = 31). Twenty-one completed ≥4 coaching sessions. Among the 23 for whom 6-month contraceptive continuation could be determined, 20 continued their baseline method, 2 switched methods without a gap in use, and 1 discontinued contraceptive use. Five were lost to follow up after enrollment; continuation status was indeterminant for the remaining five. Among the 22 who completed exit interviews, all expressed high program acceptability citing that it provided knowledge-based benefits, nonknowledge-based benefits, and an opportunity to develop a positive, supportive relationship with a reproductive health expert. Participants provided feedback on logistical aspects of the program they enjoyed and made suggestions for improvements prior to embarking on a larger efficacy trial.</p><p><strong>Discussion: </strong>Health coaching is a new approach for promoting contraceptive continuation in young women. 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Abstract

Introduction: Few interventions to improve contraceptive continuation are tailored to meet the developmental needs of young women under age 25 years. The Health Coaching for Contraceptive Continuation (HC3) intervention was designed to address this gap. In this special report, we describe the rationale for using health coaching, conceptual framework, intervention processes, and findings from a single-arm feasibility study of the intervention protocol.

Methodology: Health coaching is a person-centered behavioral change approach organized around five main strategies: providing education relevant to health goals, building health self-management skills, offering patient-centered counseling, identifying barriers to adherence, and fostering personal accountability for achieving health goals. We used these strategies to affect theory-driven mediators delineated in the Integrative Model of Behavioral Prediction (intentions, knowledge, attitudes, perceived social norms, and self-efficacy) and clinical mediators posited to change through program participation (shared contraceptive decision-making, method satisfaction, quality of life, distress tolerance, experiential avoidance, patient-coach alliance, and expectations of treatment effect). Experienced sexual health educators completed a manualized, 4-week health training program adapted from the National Society of Health Coaches. Between March and December 2017, we recruited a convenience sample of sexually-active women ages 14-21 years who initiated a new contraceptive in the prior 14 days from three urban pediatric clinics in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. At baseline, participants completed a socio-demographic questionnaire, contraceptive needs assessment interview, and prioritized reproductive topics to learn more about. We synthesized these data into a coaching plan that guided the monthly coaching sessions which occurred for 6 months following contraceptive initiation. We assessed method adherence and continuation with monthly follow-up questionnaires and corroborated the findings through electronic medical record and pharmacy refill data review. Exit interviews assessed program acceptability. Feasibility outcomes measured throughout the protocol administration included recruitment and retention success. We used descriptive statistics to assess baseline and follow up questionnaire measures and audio-recorded and transcribed exit interviews verbatim. Two independent coders used deductive and inductive content analysis coding approaches to identify themes related to program acceptability.

Results: Of 92 women approached for the longitudinal intervention, 33 enrolled. Participants' mean age was 17.4 ± 2.1 years. Most were Black (n = 24), in high school (n = 23), and single/never-married (n = 31). Twenty-one completed ≥4 coaching sessions. Among the 23 for whom 6-month contraceptive continuation could be determined, 20 continued their baseline method, 2 switched methods without a gap in use, and 1 discontinued contraceptive use. Five were lost to follow up after enrollment; continuation status was indeterminant for the remaining five. Among the 22 who completed exit interviews, all expressed high program acceptability citing that it provided knowledge-based benefits, nonknowledge-based benefits, and an opportunity to develop a positive, supportive relationship with a reproductive health expert. Participants provided feedback on logistical aspects of the program they enjoyed and made suggestions for improvements prior to embarking on a larger efficacy trial.

Discussion: Health coaching is a new approach for promoting contraceptive continuation in young women. The conceptual framework, program structure, and feasibility findings demonstrate strong support for the program among participants. Subsequent research must explore program effects on contraceptive continuation and prevention of unintended pregnancy.

对宾夕法尼亚州费城青少年和年轻成年女性进行健康指导干预以改善避孕持续性的可行性研究。
导言:很少有针对 25 岁以下年轻女性发展需求的干预措施来改善避孕药具的持续性。持续避孕健康指导(HC3)干预就是为了弥补这一不足而设计的。在这份特别报告中,我们介绍了使用健康指导的理由、概念框架、干预过程以及干预方案的单臂可行性研究结果。方法:健康指导是一种以人为本的行为改变方法,围绕五大策略展开:提供与健康目标相关的教育、培养健康自我管理技能、提供以患者为中心的咨询、识别坚持治疗的障碍以及培养实现健康目标的个人责任感。我们利用这些策略来影响行为预测综合模型(意向、知识、态度、感知的社会规范和自我效能)中描述的理论驱动中介因素,以及假定通过参与项目而改变的临床中介因素(共同避孕决策、避孕方法满意度、生活质量、痛苦容忍度、体验性回避、患者与教练联盟和治疗效果预期)。经验丰富的性健康教育工作者完成了由国家健康教练协会改编的为期 4 周的手册化健康培训项目。2017 年 3 月至 12 月间,我们从宾夕法尼亚州费城的三家城市儿科诊所招募了 14 至 21 岁的性活跃女性作为便利样本,她们在之前的 14 天内开始使用新的避孕药具。在基线阶段,参与者完成了社会人口调查问卷、避孕需求评估访谈,并优先选择了需要了解更多的生殖话题。我们将这些数据归纳到一个指导计划中,该计划指导在开始使用避孕药具后 6 个月内的每月指导课程。我们通过每月的随访问卷对避孕方法的坚持和持续情况进行了评估,并通过电子病历和药房续购数据审查对结果进行了证实。退出访谈评估了项目的可接受性。在整个方案实施过程中,我们对可行性结果进行了测量,包括招募和保留的成功率。我们使用描述性统计来评估基线和后续问卷调查的结果,并对退出访谈进行录音和逐字记录。两名独立的编码员使用演绎和归纳内容分析编码方法来确定与项目可接受性相关的主题:在 92 名接受纵向干预的女性中,有 33 人报名参加。参与者的平均年龄为 17.4 ± 2.1 岁。大多数为黑人(24 人)、高中生(23 人)、单身/未婚(31 人)。21 人完成了≥4 次辅导课程。在可以确定是否继续使用避孕药具 6 个月的 23 人中,20 人继续使用基线避孕方法,2 人在没有间隔的情况下更换了避孕方法,1 人停止使用避孕药具。有 5 人在入组后失去了随访机会;其余 5 人的持续情况无法确定。在完成退出访谈的 22 人中,所有参与者都对该项目表示高度认可,认为它提供了基于知识的益处、基于非知识的益处以及与生殖健康专家建立积极支持关系的机会。参与者就他们喜欢的项目的后勤方面提供了反馈意见,并在开展更大规模的疗效试验前提出了改进建议:讨论:健康指导是促进年轻女性继续避孕的一种新方法。概念框架、项目结构和可行性研究结果表明,该项目得到了参与者的大力支持。后续研究必须探讨该计划对继续避孕和预防意外怀孕的效果。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.40%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health provides the latest peer-reviewed, policy-relevant research and analysis on sexual and reproductive health and rights in the United States and other developed countries. For more than four decades, Perspectives has offered unique insights into how reproductive health issues relate to one another; how they are affected by policies and programs; and their implications for individuals and societies. Published four times a year, Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health includes original research, special reports and commentaries on the latest developments in the field of sexual and reproductive health, as well as staff-written summaries of recent findings in the field.
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