Contraceptive Awareness and Reproductive Education
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Contraception, Infectious Disease, Women's Studies |
Therapuetic Areas: | Immunology / Infectious Diseases, Reproductive |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 35 |
Updated: | 4/2/2016 |
Start Date: | February 2009 |
End Date: | June 2013 |
Contact: | Jennifer G Clarke, MD, MPH |
Email: | Jennifer_Clarke@mhri.org |
Phone: | 401-729-3400 |
Empowering Women to Make Contraceptive Choices While Incarcerated
The purpose of this study is to increase the initiation and continuation of highly effective
contraceptive use while incarcerated and upon release, as well as decrease unsafe sexual
activity.
contraceptive use while incarcerated and upon release, as well as decrease unsafe sexual
activity.
Unplanned pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections are important and costly public
health problems in the United States resulting from unprotected sexual activity. Women with
a history of incarceration are at increased risk for these problems given the high rates of
substance abuse and commercial sex work in this population. This proposal is designed to
evaluate an innovative intervention Motivational Interviewing with Computer Assistance
(MICA) designed to improve contraceptive use for incarcerated women who do not want a
pregnancy and are soon to be released into the community. The investigators will utilize the
Title X program which, in conjunction with RI Department of Corrections (RI DOC), provides
reproductive health services in jail and then transitional services in the community after
release. The investigators plan to recruit 400 women from the RI DOC women's jail and
randomize them to two interventions: two sessions of personalized MICA or two sessions of
Didactic Educational Counseling (DEC), both delivered individually by trained counselors.
The two counseling interventions will be similar in length and timing, but will vary in
content, counseling style and the individualized computer generated feedback that is
reviewed with the counselor.
health problems in the United States resulting from unprotected sexual activity. Women with
a history of incarceration are at increased risk for these problems given the high rates of
substance abuse and commercial sex work in this population. This proposal is designed to
evaluate an innovative intervention Motivational Interviewing with Computer Assistance
(MICA) designed to improve contraceptive use for incarcerated women who do not want a
pregnancy and are soon to be released into the community. The investigators will utilize the
Title X program which, in conjunction with RI Department of Corrections (RI DOC), provides
reproductive health services in jail and then transitional services in the community after
release. The investigators plan to recruit 400 women from the RI DOC women's jail and
randomize them to two interventions: two sessions of personalized MICA or two sessions of
Didactic Educational Counseling (DEC), both delivered individually by trained counselors.
The two counseling interventions will be similar in length and timing, but will vary in
content, counseling style and the individualized computer generated feedback that is
reviewed with the counselor.
Inclusion Criteria:
1. Age 18-35;
2. Currently sexually active with men defined as having coital sex at least monthly in
the past three non-institutionalized months;
3. Expected place of residence after release in Providence County or within 15 miles of
follow-up site;
4. Willing to comply with protocol, follow-up and provide at least one locator;
5. Fluent in English.
Exclusion Criteria:
1. Inability to give informed consent secondary to organic brain dysfunction, not having
own legal guardianship, or active psychosis or otherwise not able to participate in
the intervention or assessments (deaf, blind, or impaired communication skills that
impair ability to participate in computerize assessment or counseling);
2. Pregnant or trying to become pregnant within the next year;
3. Hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, tubal ligation, IUD or Essure (coil),
implantable contraceptive devices (Implanon) or other procedures which make it very
unlikely to become pregnant;
4. Women who are monogamous for more than one year whose partner has had a vasectomy;
5. Housed in segregation as we will be unable to recruit them for the study
We found this trial at
2
sites
Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island is a 294-bed community teaching...
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Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island is a 294-bed community teaching...
Click here to add this to my saved trials