Interim Impacts of the Teen Options to Prevent Pregnancy Program
Impact Report from the Evaluation of Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Approaches
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Associated Project
Evaluation of Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Approaches
Prepared for:
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Adolescent Health
Key Findings
Key Findings:
- The T.O.P.P. program was highly successful in increasing participants’ use of LARC methods and reducing the incidence of unprotected sexual intercourse after the first six months of the program.
- We found no evidence that T.O.P.P.’s focus on reducing barriers to highly effective contraceptive methods had any unintended spillover effects on other sexual risk behaviors that the program did not target.
This study reports interim findings from a large-scale demonstration project and evaluation of Teen Options to Prevent Pregnancy, an 18-month clinic-based intervention designed specifically for pregnant and parenting adolescents. The study reports interim impacts of the program on adolescent sexual risk behaviors and other short-term outcomes measured six months after participants enrolled in the study. A separate report examines the program’s longer-term impacts on repeat pregnancy and sexual risk behaviors at the end of the program.
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