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European Approaches to Adolescent Sexual Behavior and Responsibility:
Executive Summary & Call to Action [PDF]
The entire monograph is also available in [PDF]
format.
Reproductive and Sexual Health Services for Teens
The health care system in the United States is cumbersome and complex
and varies from state to state. Approximately 85 percent of U.S. residents
have health care coverage through either public or private health insurance.
About 15 percent of the population—some 37 million people—have no form
of health care coverage. These people tend to be ages 18 to 24, nonwhite,
or unemployed.26 Young, unemployed,
and uninsured people who lack financial resources may also have reduced
access to effective contraception.
Reproductive health care is among the services least likely to be covered
in the U.S. health care system, particularly for teens. Although no U.S.
health care policy is known to pay for condoms, many health maintenance
organizations (HMOs), family planning clinics, and school-based health
centers provide free condoms. While 97 percent of employer plans cover
prescription drugs, only 51 percent pay for prescription contraceptive
methods, and only 15 percent pay for all five of the most common, effective,
and reversible forms of contraception—IUD, diaphragm, Depo Provera, Norplant
and oral contraceptives. Only about 33 percent pay for oral contraceptives,
the most widely used form of female contraception other than sterilization.27
Teens have access to reproductive health services through private organizations
and school-based services. Planned Parenthood Federation of America provides
education and reproductive health services but targets older teens and
young adult women for services. School-based health centers, partly funded
through Maternal and Child Health Bureau grants as well as by private
foundations, provide health services for more than half a million teens
in the United States; however, only 26 percent of the school-based health
centers that serve teens provide access to condoms or contraception.28
Abortion is legal in the United States, and women may choose the outcome
of their pregnancies during the first trimester. States regulate second
trimester abortions and impose a variety of laws to reduce the demand
for abortion, including mandatory waiting periods and parental consent
requirements.
Emergency contraception—'morning after' contraception—has been legal
for over 20 years, but has been relatively unknown and unused by women
in the United States. Slightly more than 28 percent of U.S. teenagers
have heard of emergency contraception.29 Many
teens in the U.S. are unaware of and fail to seek appropriate reproductive
health services in a timely manner, and a pregnancy or STD often drives
U.S. teens to seek reproductive health services.
In 1969, the Netherlands legalized selling contraceptives and providing
condoms in vending machines. By 1971, national health insurance included
coverage for the pill. In 1981, the Netherlands legalized abortion although
high levels of contraceptive use had already begun to drive abortion
rates lower than in surrounding countries. In the early 1980s, the Dutch
government funded the Rutgers Foundation to provide special services
for adolescents, reproductive health care to the public, and sexuality
education. The Rutgers Foundation currently runs seven sexual and reproductive
health centers 30 and employs
a multidisciplinary staff of doctors, nurses and psychologists who provide
contraception and emergency contraception, test for pregnancy and STDs,
diagnose fertility problems, and provide sexual abuse counseling.
Because the Netherlands has many port cities, controlling STDs has been
a major health concern. Easily accessible STD clinics, fully funded by
the government, provide testing, treatment, and education. Walk-in clinics
are strategically located and easily accessible for target populations.
Clinics provide early STD diagnosis, rapid STD treatment, and free HIV
testing. Clinics also offer free pre- and post-test counseling, contact
tracing, and treatment of infected partners as well as examinations and
counseling for sexual assault. Finally, clinics provide safer sex outreach
and education. Treatment is offered to everyone at no cost.31
National Public Health Insurance funds all reproductive health services—contraceptive
pills and devices, emergency contraception, abortion, testing for pregnancy
and HIV/ STD, prenatal care, delivery, and all drug therapy associated
with the early diagnosis and treatment of STD, HIV, and AIDS. Only condoms
are not funded. Over 99 percent of the Dutch population have full health
coverage.32 Dutch teens have
excellent access to the best methods of protecting themselves. Sexually
active teens encounter nonjudgmental attitudes and strong adult convictions
that young people must be sexually responsible. Services are confidential
and free or low cost. While the Netherlands has a minimum age of consent,
it is waived when a doctor or clinician believes waiver to be in the
young person's best interest.
The German government regulates insurance, and 90 percent of households
have compulsory health insurance. Private insurance is available for
the remaining ten percent of households with very high incomes. Even
though patients must meet co-payment fees, these fees remain substantially
lower than those in the United States. In addition to subsidizing health
care for almost all of its residents, the German government provides
generous support for sexuality education, family planning, and contraceptive
services.33 Most Germans believe
that sexual expression is a basic need and a normal, healthy part of
personality development. Germans believe that sexuality is to be handled
responsibly. German residents enjoy access to condoms and contraception
with few barriers.
Oral contraceptive pills, IUDs, barrier methods, and sterilization are
covered by insurance and are free of charge to women ages 20 and under.34 Adolescents
need not visit a physician to get contraception.23 Germans
view contraceptive use as indispensable to sexual intercourse,34 and
many German adolescents effectively use contraceptive methods. Some 63
percent of German teens use oral contraceptives and 57 percent use condoms.4 Condoms
are widely available in pharmacies, grocery stores, restaurants, clubs,
and in vending machines in most public rest rooms. In general, Germans
view contraceptive use as the way to avoid abortion.35 Parents,
schools, and communities support teens' use of protection when they become
sexually active.
In 1996, Germany legalized abortion within the first trimester and with "proper
counseling" which emphasizes the life of the fetus but leaves the
final decision to the woman. Second trimester abortion is not permitted
unless pregnancy endangers the mother's life. Abortion is also covered
by the national health plan and counseling is required three days prior
to the procedure.36 German law
requires parental consent for abortions in women under age 18, but doctors
may perform abortions for women as young as 14 who fully understand the
ramifications of the procedure.35
The French health care system faces rising costs; yet, the country remains
committed to national health insurance coverage.37,38 About
99 percent of French residents are covered by health insurance.39 National
health insurance covers all reproductive health services. In 1967, the
French government revoked a 1920 law restricting access to contraception.
In 1974, Parliament permitted family planning clinics to dispense condoms
and contraceptives and required that services be confidential and free
to those ages 18 and under.39 The
age of consent is 15.
The main reason for providing low cost to no cost protection is to reduce
the demand for abortion. Abortion is legal and free through the tenth
week of gestation, but women seeking abortion must wait 10 days. Second
trimester abortions are legal only when the pregnancy endangers the life
of the mother, as determined by two consulting physicians. Approximately
18 percent of abortions are accomplished through administration of RU-486
(mifepristone), which is legal until the fifth week of gestation. Minors
seeking an abortion must have the consent of at least one parent although
doctors ignore this requirement when they think it is in the best interest
of the young woman.39
The French use innovative strategies to make contraception more accessible
for adolescents. One successful approach is Mercredi Libre, or "Free
Wednesday." Students in French schools have Wednesday afternoons
off, and family planning clinics cater to teens on those days. Clinics
permit walk-in appointments and also set up educational programs to entice
teens to visit, alone, in couples, or in groups. The French increase
access to contraception through condom vending machines, located throughout
the country in places frequented by teens.
France has many STD and family planning clinics which provide education,
counseling, condoms and contraception, STD testing, and gynecological
exams. Overall, teens seeking reproductive health services encounter
few barriers in France. Services are free, conveniently timed, and promoted
by adults. Condoms are cheap, contraception is free, and both are widely
available. Abortions are free and legal, though not condoned. The focus,
in this predominantly Catholic country, is on preventing abortion through
responsible sexual behavior.
Source/Citation:
Berne L and Huberman B. European Approaches to Adolescent Sexual Behavior & Responsibility: Executive Summary & Call to Action. Washington, DC: Advocates for Youth, 1999.
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