Literature DB >> 8148842

Adolescents and access to health care.

J D Klein1, G B Slap, A B Elster, S E Cohn.   

Abstract

The developmental characteristics and health behaviors of adolescents make the availability of certain services--including reproductive health services, diagnosis and treatment of sexually transmitted disease, mental health and substance abuse counseling and treatment--critically important. Furthermore, to serve adolescents appropriately, services must be available in a wide range of health care settings, including community-based adolescent health, family planning and public health clinics, school-based and school-linked health clinics, physicians' offices, HMOs, and hospitals. National, authoritative content standards (for example, the American Medical Association's Guidelines for Adolescent Preventive Services (GAPS), a multispecialty, interdisciplinary guideline for a package of clinical preventive services for adolescents may increase the possibility that insurers will cover adolescent preventive services, and that these services will become part of health professionals' curricula and thus part of routine practice. However, additional and specific guidelines mandating specific services that must be available to adolescents in clinical settings (whether in schools or in communities) are also needed. Although local government, parents, providers, and schools must assume responsibility for ensuring that health services are available and accessible to adolescents, federal and state financing mandates are also needed to assist communities and providers in achieving these goals. The limitations in what even comprehensive programs currently are able to provide, and the dismally low rates of preventive service delivery to adolescents, suggests that adolescents require multiple points of access to comprehensive, coordinated services, and that preventive health interventions must be actively and increasingly integrated across health care, school, and community settings. Unless access issues are dealt with in a rational, coordinated fashion, America's adolescents will not have access to appropriate health services. Current efforts to minimize current health care expenditures through managed care programs inevitably conflict with efforts to deliver comprehensive preventive services to all adolescents. Use of multiple sites may not represent inadequate access to care. However, as managed care reimbursement continues to expand, school-based clinics and free-standing adolescent health programs increasingly report decreases in reimbursement without a change in demand for services. The Office of Technology Assessment study called for explicit funding and expansion of services for America's youth; since then, a federal Office of Adolescent Health has been authorized, and, by the time this reaches print, should have received appropriations and been staffed. Dryfoos has called for expansion to nearly 5000 comprehensive programs in the coming years. 76 Additionally, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has just announced a $23.2 million state-community partnership grant program to increase availability of school-based health services for children and youth with unmet health needs.77 As health care reform efforts move forward,both careful definition of the services adolescents need and adequate financing for these services are essential to ensure access to care for all adolescents.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1993        PMID: 8148842      PMCID: PMC2359229     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull N Y Acad Med        ISSN: 0028-7091


  25 in total

1.  Access to health care for adolescents. A position paper of the Society for Adolescent Medicine.

Authors:  J D Klein; G B Slap; A B Elster; S K Schonberg
Journal:  J Adolesc Health       Date:  1992-03       Impact factor: 5.012

2.  Preventive care use by school-aged children: differences by socioeconomic status.

Authors:  P W Newacheck; N Halfon
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  1988-09       Impact factor: 7.124

3.  Chronic physical and social conditions of youth. Study group report.

Authors:  M D Resnick; R Hibbard
Journal:  J Adolesc Health Care       Date:  1988-11

4.  Adolescent health. Synopsis of a conference.

Authors: 
Journal:  Am J Dis Child       Date:  1989-04

5.  Connectedness.

Authors:  E R McAnarney
Journal:  Am J Dis Child       Date:  1989-04

6.  Communicating with adolescents in alternative health care sites.

Authors:  M E Vernon; C Seymore
Journal:  Semin Adolesc Med       Date:  1987-06

7.  Confidentiality in health care. A survey of knowledge, perceptions, and attitudes among high school students.

Authors:  T L Cheng; J A Savageau; A L Sattler; T G DeWitt
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1993-03-17       Impact factor: 56.272

8.  Race, ethnicity, and access to ambulatory care among US adolescents.

Authors:  T A Lieu; P W Newacheck; M A McManus
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1993-07       Impact factor: 9.308

9.  The appropriateness of health services for adolescents: youth's opinions and attitudes.

Authors:  M Resnick; R W Blum; D Hedin
Journal:  J Adolesc Health Care       Date:  1980-12

10.  Satisfaction with health care. A predictor of adolescents' appointment keeping.

Authors:  I F Litt; W R Cuskey
Journal:  J Adolesc Health Care       Date:  1984-07
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  4 in total

1.  An evaluation of initiatives to improve family planning use by African-American adolescents.

Authors:  P Kissinger; S Trim; E Williams; E Mielke; K Koporc; R W Brown
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 1.798

2.  BMI, Body Image, Emotional Well-Being and Weight-Control Behaviors in Urban African American Adolescents.

Authors:  Delenya Allen; Harolyn M E Belcher; Allen Young; Lillian Williams Gibson; Elizabeth Colantuoni; Maria Trent
Journal:  Int J Child Health Nutr       Date:  2016

3.  Paediatric school-based clinics in Saskatoon: Providing equitable access to paediatric care.

Authors:  Maryam Mehtar
Journal:  Paediatr Child Health       Date:  2016 Jun-Jul       Impact factor: 2.253

4.  Adolescent drug abuse - awareness & prevention.

Authors:  Bharath Chakravarthy; Shyam Shah; Shahram Lotfipour
Journal:  Indian J Med Res       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 2.375

  4 in total

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