Abstract

School-linked sexual health services for young people (SSHYP): a survey and systematic review concerning current models, effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and research opportunities

Highlights

  • Background in many schools and sixth form colleges there is collaboration between health practitioners, This report is based on a service-mapping study youth workers and teachers in delivering both and a systematic review concerning sexual healthschool premises; the relationship education (SRE) sessions and sexual health services

  • Uptake appeared to be higher when condoms were available without faceto-face contact; it may have been substantially influenced by the hours during which the service was available

  • When condoms were available free of charge, from baskets, more were taken than when they had to be bought from vending machines; there is no evidence that the proportion of students accessing condoms was higher when condoms were available from baskets, the difference between the numbers of condoms distributed by the two methods is so great as to make this appear probable

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Summary

Introduction

Background in many schools and sixth form colleges there is collaboration between health practitioners, This report is based on a service-mapping study youth workers and teachers in delivering both and a systematic review concerning sexual healthSRE sessions and sexual health services. SBSHS and SLSHS staffed by a study and a systematic review concerning sexual health multiprofessional team, but not medical practitioners, services for young people, either based in or closely offering ‘basic’ or ‘intermediate’ levels of service.Thirdly, linked to schools. Sexual health services (SBSHS) and school-linked or ‘comprehensive’ levels of service.The systematic sexual health services (SLSHS) in the UK, review review showed that SBSHS are not associated with and synthesise existing evidence from qualitative and higher rates of sexual activity among young people, quantitative studies concerning the effectiveness, nor with an earlier age of first intercourse.There was acceptability and cost-effectiveness of these types evidence to show positive effects in terms of reductions of service and to identify potential areas for further in births to teenage mothers, and in chlamydial infection research.

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