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			 Obstetrician-gynecologists, in particular, should screen their 
			patients routinely for intimate partner violence and sexual coercion 
			and be prepared to discuss it, the Committee on Adolescent Health 
			Care of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists 
			advises. 
 "Our aim is to give the healthcare provider a guide on how to 
			approach adolescents and educate them on the importance of 
			relationships that promote their overall wellbeing," said Dr. 
			Oluyemisi Adeyemi-Fowode of Texas Children's Hospital and Baylor 
			College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, who co-authored the 
			committee's opinion statement and resource for doctors published in 
			Obstetrics & Gynecology.
 
 "We want to recognize the full spectrum of relationships and that 
			not all adolescents are involved in sexual relationships," she said 
			in an email. "This acknowledges the sexual and non-sexual aspects of 
			relationships."
 
			 
			
 Adeyemi-Fowode and her coauthor Dr. Karen Gerancher of Wake Forest 
			School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, suggest 
			creating a nonjudgmental environment for teens to talk and recommend 
			educating staff about unique concerns that adolescents may have as 
			compared to adult patients. Parents and caregivers should be 
			provided with resources, too, they write.
 
 "As individuals, our days include constant interaction with other 
			people," Adeyemi-Fowode told Reuters Health. "Learning how to 
			effectively communicate is essential to these exchanges, and it is a 
			skill that we begin to develop very early in life."
 
 In middle school, when self-discovery develops, parents, mentors and 
			healthcare providers can help adolescents build on these 
			communication skills. As they spend more time on social networking 
			sites and other electronic media, teens could use guidance on how to 
			recognize relationships that positively encourage them and 
			relationships that hurt them emotionally or physically.
 
 Primarily, healthcare providers and parents should discuss key 
			aspects of a healthy relationship, including respect, communication 
			and the value of people's bodies and personal health. Equality, 
			honesty, physical safety, independence and humor are also good 
			qualities in a positive relationship.
 
			
			 
			
 As doctors interact with teens, they should also be aware of how 
			social norms, religion and family influence could play a role in 
			their relationships.
 
			
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			Although the primary focus of counseling should help teens define a 
			healthy relationship, it's important to discuss unhealthy 
			characteristics, too, the authors write. This includes control, 
			disrespect, intimidation, dishonesty, dependence, hostility and 
			abuse. They cite a 2017 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
			study of young women in high school that found about 11 percent had 
			been forced to engage in sexual activities they didn't want, 
			including kissing, touching and sexual intercourse. About 9 percent 
			said they were physically hurt by someone they were dating. 
			For obstetrician-gynecologists, the initial reproductive health 
			visit recommended for girls at ages 13-15 could be a good time to 
			begin talking about romantic and sexual health concerns, the authors 
			write. They also offer doctors a list of questions that may be 
			helpful for these conversations, including "How do you feel about 
			relationships in general or about your own sexuality?" and "What 
			qualities are important to someone you would date or go out with?"
 Health providers can provide confidentiality for teens but also talk 
			with parents about their kids' relationships. The committee opinion 
			suggests that doctors encourage parents to model good relationships, 
			discuss sex and sexual risk, and monitor media to reduce exposure to 
			highly sexualized content.
 
			"Without intentionally talking to them about respectful, equitable 
			relationships, we're leaving them to fend for themselves," said Dr. 
			Elizabeth Miller, chief of adolescent and young adult medicine at 
			Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, who wasn't involved in 
			the opinion statement. 
			
			 
			
 Miller recommends FuturesWithoutViolence.org, a website that offers 
			resources on dating violence, workplace harassment, domestic 
			violence and childhood trauma. She and colleagues distribute the 
			organization's "Hanging Out or Hooking Up?" safety card (https://bit.ly/2PQfxEM), 
			which offers tips to recognize and address adolescent relationship 
			abuse, to patients and parents, Miller said.
 
 "More than 20 years of research shows the impact of abusive 
			relationships on young people's health," Miller said in a phone 
			interview. "Unintended pregnancies, sexually-transmitted infections, 
			HIV, depression, anxiety, suicide, disordered eating and substance 
			abuse can stem from this."
 
 SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2JNPgBa Obstetrics & Gynecology, online 
			October 24, 2018.
 
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