Youth Research Working Papers are in-depth descriptions of research projects undertaken by FHI/YouthNet. They include an introduction, methodology, results, discussion, recommendations, tables, and figures. These papers are part of the overall
YouthNet research effort.
Youth Research Working Paper No. 7. Operations Research Study to Improve Postabortion Care (PAC) Services among Adolescents in the Dominican Republic (PDF, 350 KB). This paper summarizes an operations research study to improve the PAC counseling and contraceptive uptake among adolescent PAC patients seeking services in the Dominican Republic. Before the study and intervention, few patients left with contraception; after the intervention, 40 percent of patients who wished to delay pregnancy left with a contraceptive method, with no significant differences found between the adolescents and older women in terms of contraceptive uptake.
Youth Research Working Paper No. 4. An Assessment of Services for Adolescents in Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission Programs (PDF, 407 KB). This report describes the study results conducted at four antenatal care clinics with PMTCT programs in Kenya. The study identified and evaluated strategies for meeting youth's HIV and reproductive health needs within PMTCT services, based on assessments of HIV/AIDS, PMTCT, and contraceptive related knowledge, awareness, and attitudes that influenced service use. The 51-page report includes 27 tables and four figures.
Youth Research Working Paper No. 3. Formative Research on Youth Peer Education Program Productivity and Sustainability (PDF, 489 KB). This 64-page paper discusses the first phase of a two-part study, which identified core elements of programs through an examination of program dynamics, activities, costs, and outputs in two countries. Based on this data, the first phase developed frameworks and eight checklists to use in assessing youth peer education effectiveness and sustainability.
Youth Research Working Paper No. 1. Iringa Youth Behavior Survey – Findings and Report (PDF, 564 KB). This paper reports on a population-based, household survey of youth ages 13 to 24. It provides a comprehensive picture of knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of youth regarding HIV and reproductive health issues. It includes 13 recommendations on protective strategies, gender norms, knowledge-behavior gap, and services. The narrative discussions of the findings include data in 36 tables and 27 figures.