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Teen Pregnancy clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04494477 Completed - Teen Pregnancy Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Impact of the IN•Clued Curriculum: An LGBTQ Sex ed Program

Start date: February 22, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The INclued program was implemented in 16 states across the US. The purpose of this study is to measure: Nine months after the end of the program and one year after the workshop, are IN•clued participants less likely to report engaging in risky sexual behavior in the past three months compared to control group participants?

NCT ID: NCT02612324 Completed - Clinical trials for Sexually Transmitted Infections

An Evaluation of Pono Choices: A Culturally Responsive Teen Pregnancy and STI Prevention Program

Start date: January 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the impact Pono Choices has among youth for teen pregnancy and STI prevention measures such as: initiation of sexual activity; engagement in high risk sexual behaviors; knowledge of pregnancy and STI prevention; attitudes toward healthy sexual behaviors; skills in managing relationships and choices; and intentions about future sexual activity.

NCT ID: NCT02540304 Completed - Teen Pregnancy Clinical Trials

Teen Pregnancy Prevention Replication Study

Start date: September 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is evaluating the effectiveness of three evidence-based teen pregnancy prevention (TPP) programs in reducing sexual risk-taking behaviors of youth. The study is using an experimental design in which youth are randomly assigned to receive either TPP programming or services as usual.

NCT ID: NCT02539602 Completed - Teen Pregnancy Clinical Trials

Evaluation of a Need to Know (N2K): A New Sex Education Program for High School Students

N2K
Start date: September 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This trial evaluated the impact of N2K, a three-year quasi-experimental study to delay sexual initiation and increase condom and contraception use among high school students. The program was administered to treatment students beginning in the fall of 2012 (9th grade) and continued through the spring of 2015 (11th grade). The purpose of this study was to measure: 1) the impact of N2K on sexual initiation at the end of the three-year program and 2) the impact of N2K on condom or contraception non-use at the end of the program.

NCT ID: NCT00342706 Completed - Teen Pregnancy Clinical Trials

Building Healthy Teen Relationships and Reproductive Practices to Increase Intervals Between Pregnancies

Start date: January 10, 2005
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study will determine the best ways to help teen mothers stay healthy and to increase the time between their pregnancies to at least 2 years. It is designed to encourage attitudes and behaviors that are generally thought to be related to longer intervals between pregnancies. Children of teen mothers generally receive less health care, have lower IQ scores and are more likely to enter foster care. They have less supportive home environments and higher rates of incarceration and teen childbearing. African-American and Latino teenagers living in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area who are pregnant with their first baby may be eligible for this study. Mothers or mother figures of the teens also are encouraged to participate. Candidates must be between 15 and 18 year of age and speak English. Teen mothers enrolled in the study take a urine pregnancy test every 6 months during this 2-year study. They are randomly assigned to one of the following two groups: Usual Care Group: Teens in this group are interviewed by telephone for about 1 hour every 6 months and for about 15 minutes at 3, 9, 15 and 21 months. The hour-long interview includes questions about the teen's feelings and behaviors, risks to her health and well being, and how she communicates with her boyfriend and family members. She is also asked about what she does to reach personal goals, what she thinks about sexual health, and what support she gets from her family, boyfriend, or others. The 15-minute interview is an update to check on the teen's health and pregnancy status and to verify contact information. Intervention Group: Teens in this group are asked the same questions as those in the usual care group; however, they are involved in a project designed to encourage them to set goals of furthering their education and training and wait at least 2 years before becoming pregnant again. Teens in this group are counseled on learning to communicate and work out problems with their family and boyfriend and on how to keep from getting pregnant again soon. The participants meet for a 2-hour group session every 3 months at a local health center and are contacted frequently by a cell phone, which is provided to them at no cost. The phone sessions are about things that are important to the teens, such as problems in their relationships, health, sexually transmitted diseases, and preventing another pregnancy too soon. The conversations are private and take about 45 minutes. Mothers (or...