| Literature DB >> 27664599 |
Rehana A Salam1, Jai K Das1, Zohra S Lassi2, Zulfiqar A Bhutta3.
Abstract
Adolescent health care is challenging compared to that of children and adults, due to their rapidly evolving physical, intellectual, and emotional development. This paper is the concluding paper for a series of reviews to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions for improving adolescent health and well-being. In this paper, we summarize the evidence evaluated in the previous papers and suggest areas where there is enough existing evidence to recommend implementation and areas where further research is needed to reach consensus. Potentially effective interventions for adolescent health and well-being include interventions for adolescent sexual and reproductive health, micronutrient supplementation, nutrition interventions for pregnant adolescents, interventions to improve vaccine uptake among adolescents, and interventions for substance abuse. Majority of the evidence for improving immunization coverage, substance abuse, mental health, and accidents and injury prevention comes from high-income countries. Future studies should specifically be targeted toward the low- and middle-income countries with long term follow-up and standardized and validated measurement instruments to maximize comparability of results. Assessment of effects by gender and socioeconomic status is also important as there may be differences in the effectiveness of certain interventions. It is also important to recognize ideal delivery platforms that can augment the coverage of proven adolescent health-specific interventions and provide an opportunity to reach hard-to-reach and disadvantaged population groups.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent health; Adolescent immunization; Adolescent nutrition; Adolescent sexual health; Injury prevention; Mental health; Substance abuse
Year: 2016 PMID: 27664599 PMCID: PMC5026678 DOI: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2016.05.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adolesc Health ISSN: 1054-139X Impact factor: 5.012
Summary of findings for the effect of adolescent health interventions
| Outcome | RR/SMD (95% CI) | Outcome | RR/SMD (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sexual and reproductive health interventions | |||
| Mean knowledge score | SMD: 2.04 (1.31, 2.78) | Condom use | RR: 1.11 (1.04, 1.20) |
| Mean efficacy score | SMD: .76 (.22, 1.30) | Sexual encounter | RR: 1.00 (.93, 1.07) |
| Use of any contraception | RR: 1.07 (1.00, 1.14) | STI | RR: 1.08 (.79, 1.46) |
| Adolescent pregnancies | RR: .85 (.74, .98) | Repeat teenage pregnancies | RR: .63 (.49, .82) |
| Preventing female genital mutilation | |||
| Belief that FGM/C compromise human rights of women | RR: 1.30 (.47, 3.64) | Knowledge of harmful consequences | RR: 1.53 (1.08, 2.16) |
| Prevalence of FGM/C | RR: .63 (.49, .82) | ||
| Preventing dating violence | |||
| Episodes of relationship violence | RR: .77 (.53, 1.13) | Skills related to relationship violence | SMD: 0.03 (−.11, .17) |
| Behavior related to relationship violence | SMD: −.07 (−.31, .16) | Knowledge related to relationship violence | SMD: .44 (.28, .60) |
| Promoting healthy nutrition and preventing obesity | |||
| Mean BMI | SMD: −.08 (−.17, .01) | ||
| Micronutrient supplementation | |||
| Anemia | RR: .69 (.62, .76) | ||
| Nutrition for pregnant adolescents | |||
| Mean birth weight | RR: .25 (.08, .41) | Preterm delivery | RR: .73 (.57, .95) |
| Low birth weight | RR: .70 (.57, .84) | Iron-deficiency anemia | RR: .34 (.13, .89) |
| Serum calcium | SMD: −.17 (−.58, .23) | ||
| Adolescent immunization | |||
| Measles incidence | RR: .12 (.03, .38) | HPV incidence | RR: .26 (.23, .30) |
| Mumps incidence | RR: .96 (.42, 2.21) | HPV prevalence | RR: .56 (.38, .82) |
| Varicella deaths | RR: .74 (.56, .98) | HPV—vaccine coverage | RR: 1.76 (1.73, 1.80) |
| Meningococcal vaccine uptake | RR: 1.56 (1.45, 1.67) | HPV—CIN3 incidence | RR: .15 (.01, 2.46) |
| Pertussis incidence | RR: .24 (.16, .36) | HPV—vaccine uptake | RR: 1.21 (1.20, 1.23) |
| Rubella susceptibility | RR: .27 (.15, .46) | Multivaccine coverage | RR: 1.78 (1.41, 2.23) |
| HPV—incidence of genital warts | RR: .66 (.52, .84) | ||
| Preventing substance abuse | |||
| Smoking uptake (pure prevention) | RR: .88 [.82, .96] | Frequency of drinking days | SMD: .07 [.02, .13] |
| Regular smoking | RR: .59 [.42, .83] | Frequency of heavy drinking | SMD: .07 [−.01, .14] |
| Smoking at follow-up (smoke-free class competition) | RR: .86 [.79, .94] | Marijuana use (>12 months) | RR: .83 [.69, .99] |
| Lifetime smoking | RR: .73 [.64, .82] | Hard drug use (>12 months) | RR: .86 [.39, 1.90] |
| 30-day smoking | RR: .79 [.61, 1.02] | Cannabis use | RR: .58 [.55, .62] |
| Alcohol consumption (quantity/week/month) | SMD: .13 [.07, .19] | ||
| Interventions for mental health | |||
| Knowledge of suicide prevention | SMD: .72 [.36, 1.07] | Depression | SMD: −.16 [−.26, −.05] |
| Anxiety | SMD: −.33 [−.59, −.06] | Knowledge of suicide | SMD: 1.51 [.57, 2.45] |
| Accident and injury prevention | |||
| Incidence of injury | RR: .66 (.59, .73) | Helmet use | RR: 1.00 (.98, 1.02) |
| Road accidents | RR: .81 (.78, .84) | Seatbelt use | RR: .99 (.97, 1.00) |
| Injuries per hour of exposure | RR: .79 (.73, .86) | Injuries per number of exposure | RR: .79 (.70, .88) |
BMI = body mass index; CBT = cognitive behavioral therapy; CI = confidence interval; EAT = eating attitude test; EDI = eating disorder inventory; FGM/C = female genital mutilation/cutting; HPV = human papillomavirus; RR = relative risk; SATAQ = sociocultural attitudes toward appearance questionnaire; SMD = standard mean difference; STI = sexually transmitted infections.
Figure 1Existing evidence of adolescent health–specific interventions according to the delivery platforms utilized. FGM/C = female genital mutilation/cutting; MMN = multiple micronutrient supplementation.