This is a prospective study involving two phases: 1) adaptation and 2) intervention, in adolescents aged 14-21 experiencing homelessness. The overarching goal is to develop and evaluate the effectiveness and feasibility of a counselling intervention to improve access to contraception among AYA experiencing homelessness. During the first phase, referred to as the adaption phase, we will rely on collective input from formative groups of AYA experiencing homelessness to adapt the CHOICE counselling intervention for this underserved and under-resourced population. In the second phase, referred to as the intervention phase, we will evaluate the effectiveness and feasibility of the adapted intervention (CHOICE-AYA).
This study will adapt an evidence-based contraceptive counseling intervention (CHOICE) using input from the formative groups of AYA experiencing homelessness and study the impact of the adapted counseling (CHOICE-AYA) on contraceptive use, continuation, and satisfaction in a specialized community care setting. After informed consent is obtained, participants will receive the CHOICE-AYA counseling intervention by trained clinic staff. Provision of contraception based on participant choice will occur through the clinic provider same day. Participants will be sent links to complete the follow-up surveys at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months. In addition, Clinic staff (e.g., prescribers and nurses) will be sent electronic surveys following randomly selected study visits. Findings will inform best practices for this vulnerable population and provide foundational evidence for future studies focused on expanding care to other sites that serve this group.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
Adapted contraceptive counseling specific to AYA experiencing homelessness
Children's Mercy Research Institute
Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Contraceptive uptake
Rates of reliable contraceptive use
Time frame: Study Day 1
Contraceptive satisfaction
brief likert-style survey assessing whether they are still on the method, how satisfied they are with this method
Time frame: 1, 3, 6, and 12 months post intervention
Contraceptive continuation
brief survey
Time frame: 1, 3, 6, and 12 months post intervention
Feasibility of intervention (perceived by clinic staff and participants)
Brief survey based on Bowen's constructs of feasibility
Time frame: Post-visit
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