Can Intervention Programs Prevent Subsequent Births to Teenage Mothers?
Lorraine Klerman
Professor, University of
Alabama at Birmingham
Differences In Population
Enrollment
(voluntary/mandatory)
Age at enrollment (%
of teenagers)
Race/ethnicity (%
Caucasian, African-American, Hispanic)
Timing of first
contact (during pregnancy/ already had infant or
toddler)
Welfare status at
enrollment (all/some)
Differences Between
Programs Overall
Auspices (public
health/welfare)
Principal contact
(nurse/case manager)
Size of caseload
(20-25 families/50-60 clients
Usual place of contact
(home/case managers office)
Involvement of others
(much/some)
Focus (health &
maternal life course/move from welfare)
Approach (behavioral
change/information & education
Financial incentives
(no/yes)
Differences in Family
Planning Components
Importance of family
planning component (central/peripheral)
Integration with rest
of program (high/low)
Family planning
education (by nurse / in workshop)
Family planning
counseling (directive / not directive)
Differences In Result
Elmira site follow-up-
fewer pregnancies and births among home visited women
at 46 month and 15 year
Memphis site -
fewer pregnancies and births among home visited women
at 24 month follow-up
Camden site -
fewer pregnancies among case managed women at 29
month follow-up (but more births)
Newark and Chicago
sites - more pregnancies and births among case
managed women at 29 month follow-up
Elmira site -
intervals between births longer among home visited
women at 46 month and 15 year follow-up
Reasons For Greater
Impact of
Home Visiting Program
-- use of nurse
-- focus on home
-- attention to social supports
-- timing of first contact
-- an element in
planning for the future
-- taught by same person in same places
-- directive approach
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