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			 The study team examined nationally-representative survey data from 
			1,918 young people ages 13 to 26 and found that overall, just 55 
			percent of young women and 49 percent of young men had ever had 
			private time during a medical exam. 
 Perhaps not surprisingly, the youngest teens in the study were least 
			likely to have private time with a clinician: only about 22 percent 
			of 13- and 14-year-old girls and 14 percent of boys this age ever 
			had this opportunity. And just 43 percent of teens ages 15 to 18 had 
			ever had private time with a clinician during a checkup.
 
 Even among young adults, however, more than 30 percent of women and 
			almost 40 percent of men had never had private time with a 
			clinician.
 
 "Private time and confidentiality are critical because when 
			confidentiality is not assured, adolescents and young adults are 
			less willing to discuss sensitive topics with providers or may skip 
			care altogether," said lead study author Stephanie Grilo of the 
			Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health in New York 
			City.
 
			
			 
			
 "Parents need to know that private time and confidentiality are 
			important parts of keeping teens healthy and they should be asking 
			for this as it will improve the health of their adolescent," Grilo 
			said by email.
 
 Several leading physician groups representing pediatricians, family 
			practitioners and specialists in adolescent health and reproductive 
			medicine all recommend that teens and young adults get private time 
			and discuss confidentiality with clinicians during routine checkups.
 
 While there are limits to this - doctors wouldn't keep it 
			confidential if a teen discussed harming themselves or others, for 
			example - it's widely accepted in the medical community that young 
			patients need to be able to speak freely with clinicians about 
			sensitive topics like sex, drugs and drinking.
 
			
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			"Private time has been a recommended part of adolescent clinical 
			care for quite some time, and is a cornerstone of the movement to 
			support the transition from the pediatric system of care (which 
			focuses on the parent as the key partner to the clinical provider) 
			to the adult system of care (where the adolescent/young adult must 
			assume that responsibility)," said Sarah Clark, co-director of the 
			C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health at 
			the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, in an email.
 The study wasn't designed to prove whether or how private time or 
			confidentiality discussions during checkups might directly impact 
			teen health.
 
 However, teens and young adults who did have this opportunity 
			reported more positive attitudes about their providers and thought 
			these interactions should happen at a younger age.
 
 For teens to make the most of private conversations during checkups, 
			doctors and parents should start preparing children gradually as 
			they approach adolescence, said Clark, who wasn't involved in the 
			study.
 
 Starting around age 12, parents can promote teens' independence by 
			encouraging them to write down any health problems or questions in 
			advance, and then by having them handle checking themselves in and 
			completing any forms on their own when they get to the doctor, Clark 
			advised.
 
 During these transitional visits, parents can also wait to speak, 
			giving children a chance to interact more with doctors, and parents 
			can also volunteer to step out of the room to allow for private 
			time.
 
 "The early opportunities to gain skills and confidence, with a 
			parent nearby for guidance, will pave the way for teens to navigate 
			the health care system when they become adults," Clark said.
 
 SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2TdRBcD Journal of Adolescent Health, online 
			January 9, 2019.
 
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