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Dr. Felice has put together clinical reviews articles that cover a
broad scope of clinical issues that are common among sexually
active adolescent patients. Some issues addressed include: HPV
Vaccine Update; Treating Dysmenorrhea/Menorrhagia; New STD
Guidelines; Emergency Contraception; Talking to Parents about Teen
Sexuality; and Long-acting Reversible Contraception. Most
pediatricians feel poorly equipped to address these problems. They
are also complicated issues that give the average pediatric
clinician pause and often take more time than usually scheduled in
a busy practice. By providing practical updated information on
these clinical problems, pediatric practitioners can become more
comfortable in dealing with these topics. Although many clinicians
are not involved with adolescents in the juvenile justice system,
Dr. Felice included an article on this so that pediatricians can be
more educated and sensitive to the needs of these young people. An
article on human trafficking of teens in included with the hope
bringing awareness of this issue. Articles in this issue were
selected specifically because they directly affect primary
pediatric care. For example, an article is included on how to help
young people avoid being victims of partner violence rather than an
article on sexual abuse and rape because adolescents would be
treated in the emergency room and not the pediatrician's office.
Written by a pediatrician/adolescent medicine specialist and a
developmental psychologist, this book is a collection of
informative, nonredundant yet comprehensive studies on adolescent
pregnancy and parenting. More than 200 adolescent women in an
ethnically diverse sample were studied prenatally and at regular
6-month intervals for 31/2 years postpartum. Most of the teens were
poor, unmarried, first-time mothers who resided within Southeast
San Diego, a poor urban area approximately 10 miles north of the
U.S.-Mexico border. The purpose of this book was to offer
researchers, practitioners, program directors, teachers, and
graduate and medical students a better understanding of teenage
pregnancy and parenthood within the following domains: * adolescent
prenatal care and postpartum maternal and infant health outcomes, *
immediate repeat pregnancy, * adolescent mothers' parenting, * the
role of the adolescent's mother in teenage mothers' parenting, and
* the baby's father.
Written by a pediatrician/adolescent medicine specialist and a
developmental psychologist, this book is a collection of
informative, nonredundant yet comprehensive studies on adolescent
pregnancy and parenting. More than 200 adolescent women in an
ethnically diverse sample were studied prenatally and at regular
6-month intervals for 31/2 years postpartum. Most of the teens were
poor, unmarried, first-time mothers who resided within Southeast
San Diego, a poor urban area approximately 10 miles north of the
U.S.-Mexico border.
The purpose of this book was to offer researchers, practitioners,
program directors, teachers, and graduate and medical students a
better understanding of teenage pregnancy and parenthood within the
following domains:
* adolescent prenatal care and postpartum maternal and infant
health outcomes,
* immediate repeat pregnancy,
* adolescent mothers' parenting,
* the role of the adolescent's mother in teenage mothers'
parenting, and
* the baby's father.
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