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Transitions
Volume 14, No. 3,
April 2002
This Transitions is
also available in [PDF] format.
Plain Talk—Communities Mobilizing to Reduce Adolescents' Sexual Risks1
Plain Talk is a neighborhood-based
initiative, launched by the Annie E. Casey Foundation in
1993, to help adults develop the skills and tools they
need to communicate effectively
with young people about reducing sexual risk behaviors.
Five urban neighborhoods—Mechanicsville in Atlanta, GA; Logan Heights in
San Diego, CA; White Center in Seattle, WA; St. Thomas in New Orleans,
LA; and Stowe Village in Hartford, CT—received resources and
tools to develop and implement a plan adhering to four
basic principles:
- Community
residents should be central to the decision-making process.
- Residents
should come to a consensus about what changes are necessary.
- Communities
should have reliable information regarding the problems
and practices addressed.
- Adults
should not deny the reality that some youth are sexually
active.
Each community used "community
mapping" to gather critical data regarding beliefs, norms, and
practices within that community. This highly collaborative process
helped forge community awareness and motivation around the issue of
adolescents' sexual risk behaviors. Based on a draft survey instrument,
residents developed culturally appropriate surveys and went door-to-door,
surveying between 300 and 700 adults in the community. Residents interviewed
an equal number of adolescents at "youth-friendly" sites
and, with lead agency staff, analyzed the data.
Early on, each community developed a network of supportive, resident, opinion
leaders and spokespeople who successfully presented the findings from the community
mapping and argued for important community actions. In each neighborhood, the
network continued to be a primary means for disseminating information, recruiting
residents to participate, and receiving feedback.
The cornerstone of Plain Talk's strategy was adult peer education.
In each community, Plain Talk staff worked with interested residents
to develop their
skills as peer educators. Residents created formal and informal opportunities
and used innovative techniques, such as role plays and fables, to give messages
cultural relevance and to empower the community's adults. Residents were the
primary means of delivering effective and consistent messages to adults and
youth. Through work at events around Cinco de Mayo, Kwanza, Valentine's Day,
and Father's Day, among others, neighborhood spokespeople gained visibility
as knowledgeable "Plain Talkers," approachable by youth and adults
alike. Residents also assumed increasing levels of responsibility for planning
and carrying out activities. Residents' leadership ensured that messages regarding
adolescent sexual health remained culturally appropriate and also empowered
residents to tackle other issues of community concern.
Plain Talk succeeded in accomplishing several goals related to
adolescent sexual health in the communities of Plain Talk. Evaluation
found that—
- The percentage
of young women who experienced pregnancy declined from
54.5 percent in 1994 to 33.6 percent in 1998.
- Sexually
active youth who had discussed birth control with an
adult were about half as likely, on average, to cause
or experience a pregnancy as peers who had no such communication.
- The proportion
of sexually experienced youth who had spoken with an
adult about birth control, pregnancy, or STI increased
from 61 percent in 1994 to 70 percent in 1998.2
Plain Talk successfully
mobilized communities to protect young people from the risks associated
with pregnancy and HIV and other STIs. It did not attempt to prevent,
nor to encourage, teens' having sexual intercourse.
References:
- Adapted and
printed with permission from the Annie E. Casey Foundation's
Web materials on the Plain Talk initiative, http://www.aecf.org/publications/plaintalk/.
- Grossman JB
et al. Adult Communication and Teen Sex: Changing
a Community. Philadelphia, PA: Public/Private Ventures,
2001.
Transitions (ISSN 1097-1254) © 2002, is a quarterly publication of Advocates for Youth—Helping young people make safe and responsible decisions about sex. For permission to reprint, contact Transitions' editor at 202.419.3420.
Editor: Sue Alford
Click here to view the Publications Catalog and/or
to order this publication.
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