All Stories

  1. Mothers' Attitudes Toward Adolescent Confidential Services: Development and Validation of Scales for Use in English- and Spanish-speaking Populations
  2. Parental Acceptability of Contraceptive Methods Offered to Their Teen During a Confidential Health Care Visit
  3. Computer-assisted provision of hormonal contraception in acute care settings
  4. Benefit or burden? A sociotechnical analysis of diagnostic computer kiosks in four California hospital emergency departments
  5. The Intersection of Progress and Missed Opportunities: Provider Group Variations in Chlamydia Screening Practices Within California's Family Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment Program
  6. Understanding the Attitudes of Latino Parents Toward Confidential Health Services for Teens
  7. 10. Parental Acceptability of Contraceptive Methods Offered to Their Teen During a Confidential Health Care Visit
  8. Translating and Sustaining a Chlamydial Screening Intervention 4 Years Later
  9. Forging Partnerships With Parents While Delivering Adolescent Confidential Health Services: A Clinical Paradox
  10. A Randomized Trial of Computer Kiosk–expedited Management of Cystitis in the Emergency Department
  11. Acceptability and Opportunity for Chlamydia Screening in Acute Care
  12. 57. Understanding Latino Parents' Attitudes Towards Confidential Health Services for Their Teens
  13. 78. Computer Technology to Activate Patients to Request Chlamydia Screening in Acute Care Settings
  14. Parental Attitudes Towards Confidential HIV Screening for Teens
  15. Acceptability & Feasibility of an Interactive Computer Assisted Intervention to Increase Chlamydia Screening During Urgent Care Visits
  16. Screening for Asymptomatic Chlamydia Infections Among Sexually Active Adolescent Girls During Pediatric Urgent Care
  17. Chlamydial Screening in Urgent Care Visits
  18. Forgone Health Care among U.S. Adolescents: Associations between Risk Characteristics and Confidentiality Concern
  19. 68: What will it take to improve chalmydial screening in teens?
  20. Clinicians as a Primary Source of Sexual Health Information for Teens
  21. Forgone health care among U.S. Adolescents: Associations between risk characteristics and confidentiality concern
  22. 52: Provider reported barriers to Chlamydia screening in adolescents during urgent care visits
  23. 53: Urine STI screening in urgent care visits
  24. 1: Foregone health care among U.S. adolescents
  25. Examination of the Treatment and Follow-up Care for Adolescents Who Test Positive for Chlamydia trachomatis Infection
  26. Screening Sexually Active Adolescents for Chlamydia trachomatis : What About the Boys?
  27. Retesting for chlamydia trachomatis in adolescents: How well are we doing?
  28. Obtaining sexual histories and screening teens for chlamydia: Are providers biased?
  29. HEDIS administrative data to track chlamydial screening for teens: Are we measuring what we think we are?
  30. Home STI testing: The adolescent female’s opinion
  31. To screen or not to screen: prevalence of C. trachomatis among sexually active asymptomatic male adolescents attending health maintenance pediatric visits
  32. What Sexually Transmitted Disease Screening Method Does the Adolescent Prefer?
  33. Increasing chlamydial screening rates among sexually active adolescent females attending pediatric health supervision visits: a quality improvement based model in an HMO to meet HEDIS guidelines
  34. The Effect of Discharge Pack Formula and Breast Pumps on Breastfeeding Duration and Choice of Infant Feeding Method