
Reducing Teen Pregnancy
Peer Education Programs Work!
Despite a steady decline in teen pregnancies
during 1990s, 4 out of 10 girls in this country still get
pregnant at least once
before age 20. There are nearly one million teen pregnancies each
year and about half as many teen births.
Planned Parenthood of
South Central Michigan has been working to reduce those statistics
in Southwest Michigan through innovative
teen peer education programs. Research shows that teens get
most of their information from other teens and prefer talking to
someone
of their own age about personal concerns. Our youth programs
use this approach and have been so successful that they’ve won
national awards!
The mission of these unique programs is to help reduce
teen pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections and increase
healthy relationships,
opportunities, and positive outcomes for youth in our community.
One-on-one contacts,
rap sessions, presentations, interviews, education displays
at fairs, workshops, retreats, referrals, mentoring and training are all used to get the message
out. Teen Clinics at Planned Parenthood were created so teens
can come in to talk one-on-one with a peer educator, get reproductive
health exams, pregnancy tests, STI screenings, birth control
and
educational materials. Parents are welcome to come with their
teens to the clinics and talk with a peer educator. Teen Peer
Educators
and Mentors are certified to talk to school groups, organizations,
community members, board meetings, faith communities, youth
groups and more. Each outreach activity is tailored to meet
the specific
needs and topics of each audience. Call (269) 372-1205 for more
information.
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