| Literature DB >> 25284956 |
Maria Lohan1, Aine Aventin1, Lisa Maguire2, Mike Clarke2, Mark Linden1, Lisa McDaid3.
Abstract
The World Health Organisation, amongst others, recognises that adolescent men have a vital yet neglected role in reducing teenage pregnancies and that there is a pressing need for educational interventions designed especially for them. This study seeks to fill this gap by determining the feasibility of conducting an effectiveness trial of the If I Were Jack intervention in post-primary schools. This 4-week intervention aims to increase teenagers' intentions to avoid unintended pregnancy and addresses gender inequalities in sex education by explicitly focusing on young men. A cluster randomised feasibility trial with embedded process evaluation will determine: recruitment, participation and retention rates; quality of implementation; acceptability and feasibility of the intervention and trial procedures; and costs.Entities:
Keywords: Feasibility trial; Intervention; Sex education; Sexual health promotion; Teenage pregnancy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25284956 PMCID: PMC4183752 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijer.2014.08.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Educ Res ISSN: 0883-0355
Fig. 1Jack Feasibility Trial Project Flowchart.
Psychosocial and behavioural components of the If I Were Jack intervention.
| Component | Aim | Measurement |
|---|---|---|
| Knowledge | Increase knowledge about: ways of avoiding unintended pregnancy; roles and responsibilities of young men in relation to unintended pregnancy; possible negative relational, social, emotional and financial consequences of unintended pregnancy; and sources of information and support for unintended pregnancy | Individual assessment. Total score on 10 knowledge items. Selected items from the Mathtech Knowledge Inventory ( |
| Communication skills | Increase skills communicating with parents and peers about avoiding unintended pregnancy | Comfort Communicating about Avoiding Unintended Teenage Pregnancy Scale(parents, peers and professionals) using adapted items from the Mathtech Behaviour Inventory ( |
| Attitudes about unintended pregnancy | Increase anticipated regret about the consequences of unintended pregnancy on current life and future goals | Items from the newly developed Intention to Avoid Unintended Teenage Pregnancy Scale |
| Social influences | Increase awareness of peer norms, stereotypical gender norms and parental attitudes and beliefs about teenage pregnancy | |
| Beliefs about capabilities | Increase perceived behavioural control to avoid unintended pregnancy (say no to sex or obtain and use contraception correctly) and increase self-efficacy to communicate about avoiding unintended pregnancy with parents, peers & professionals | Sexual self-efficacy scale using an adapted version of the Sexual Self-Efficacy Scale (Rosenthal, Moore, & Flynn, 1991) |
| Intentions | Increase strength of intention to avoid unplanned teenage pregnancy | Intentions to avoid unintended teenage pregnancy scale (constructed by research team) |
| Sexual behaviour | Abstinence from sexual intercourse (delay initiation of sex or return to abstinence) or avoidance of unprotected sexual intercourse (consistent correct use of contraception) | Sexual behaviour items (ever had sexual intercourse; frequency of sexual intercourse; contraception use ever/at last intercourse). Items adapted from previous sexual health surveys ( |
| Pregnancy | Avoidance of unintended pregnancy | Ever pregnant |