Impacts of a School‐Wide, Peer‐Led Approach to Sexuality Education: A Matched Comparison Group Design

Impacts of a School‐Wide, Peer‐Led Approach to Sexuality Education: A Matched Comparison Group Design

Published: Aug 01, 2018
Publisher: Journal of School Health, vol. 88, no. 8 (subscription required)
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Authors

Dana Rotz

Jennifer Manlove

Kate Welti

Background

Teen Prevention Education Program (PEP) is a school‐wide, peer‐led comprehensive sexuality education program currently implemented in more than 50 schools across 2 states. Many teen pregnancy prevention researchers and practitioners view peer‐led programs as a promising approach for reducing teen pregnancy and associated sexual risk behaviors. However, prior research on the effectiveness of these programs indicates mixed results.

Methods

We randomly assigned schools to implement Teen PEP immediately (intervention group) or on a delayed schedule (comparison group) and used propensity score matching to improve the comparability of the study groups. We surveyed students at baseline and about 6 months after the program ended.

Results

Teen PEP did not significantly impact rates of sexual activity or unprotected sex; however, the program led to improvements in exposure to information about sexual health topics and knowledge of preventing pregnancy and transmission of sexually transmitted infections.

Conclusions

Teen PEP succeeded in accomplishing some of its most proximal goals, increasing students' access to information and knowledge. However, we found little evidence that the program affects sexual risk‐taking within 6 months of its conclusion. Future research will examine the program's longer‐term impacts on sexual risk behaviors.

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