Long-Acting Contraceptives for Adolescents: A Critique of the Policy of the American Academy of Pediatrics

DOI 10.5840/ncbq20161618[1] Source

Abstract

In 2014, the American Academy of Pediatrics published its policy statement on contraception for adolescents, which provides, in effect, a mandate to temporarily sterilize all adolescents with long-acting reversible contraceptives for five to ten years. The author reviews the AAP guidelines and their effects on Catholic adolescents, their families, and adolescent health care providers. He then discusses medicolegal issues raised by the policy, outlines Catholic strategies for combating it, and proposes a diocese-based physician-led program for teaching and counseling elementary and high school students. National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 16.1 (Spring 2016): 63–81.

Topics

aap larc policy adolescents critique, long acting contraceptives adolescents ethics, catholic response adolescent contraception, fertility awareness adolescents education, natural family planning adolescent teaching, contraceptive policy catholic bioethics, larc mandate adolescents moral issues, adolescent reproductive health catholic perspective, nfp education high school programs, fertility awareness vs larc adolescents

Cite this article

National Catholic Bioethics Center, Fitzgerald JE (2016). Long-Acting Contraceptives for Adolescents: A Critique of the Policy of the American Academy of Pediatrics. https://doi.org/10.5840/ncbq20161618[1]

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