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Julia Hippisley-Cox a Division of General Practice, Medical School,
Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7 2UH, b Department of
Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Queen's Medical Centre, c School of
Nursing, Queen's Medical Centre, d Department of Geography, University of Nottingham, Nottingham
NG7 2UH
Correspondence to: J Hippisley-Cox julia.hippisley-cox{at}nottingham.ac.uk
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Abstract |
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Objective:
To examine variations in teenage pregnancy rates in Trent region and to determine possible associations with local
general practice characteristics such as the age and sex of the doctors.
The United Kingdom has the highest teenage pregnancy
rate in western Europe.1 Teenage conception rates in Trent
are among the highest in the United Kingdom.2 The
reduction of teenage pregnancies was a target for the Health of the
Nation.3 High conception rates are associated with having
a teenage mother,4 having divorced parents,5
poor education,1 and deprivation.
1 6
w1 w2 Health professionals may reduce the
harmful effects of deprivation and poor education on risk of teenage
pregnancy by improving access to effective health education and
contraceptive services.
7 8
w3-5
Since over 70% of consultations for contraception occur in general
practice9 and 98% of doctors provide contraceptive
services,10 the role of primary care services in
preventing teenage pregnancies is crucial. Although there is evidence
that female patients prefer to see female doctors11
w6 w7 w8and teenagers report high
satisfaction with general practice services,10 little is
known about the characteristics of general practices that have high or
low teenage pregnancy rates.
We aimed to determine general practice characteristics associated with
variations in teenage pregnancy rates. In particular, we investigated
the effect of the sex and age of the doctor and the availability of a
practice nurse.
Study sample
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Data collection
Design:
Cross sectional survey.
Setting:
All 826 general practices in Trent region in
existence between 1994 and 1997.
Subjects:
All pregnancies of teenagers aged 13 to 19 between 1994 and 1997 that resulted in an admission to an NHS hospital.
Main outcome measures:
Pregnancy rates for teenagers
aged 13 to 19 and general practice characteristics: presence of a
female or young doctor (under 36 years old), number of whole time
equivalent practice nurses, Townsend score, vocational training status,
list size per whole time equivalent doctor, fundholding status, and partnership size.
Results:
On multivariate analysis, lower teenage
pregnancy rates were associated with the presence of a female or young
doctor and more nurse time. Practices in deprived areas had higher
teenage pregnancy rates.
Conclusion:
General practices with female
doctors, young doctors, or more nurse time had lower teenage pregnancy
rates. The findings may have implications for the mix of health
professionals within primary care.
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Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Subjects and methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
Subjects and methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Subjects and methods
Results
Discussion
References
Ethical approval was obtained from Trent multicentre and
local research ethics committees. The study sample consisted of all
teenage pregnancies from all 826 general practices in Trent region from
1 April 1994 to 31 March 1997. The teenage pregnancies were identified
from the admissions database of Trent regional hospital with both
Office of Population Censuses and Surveys procedural codes Q09.1;
Q10.1; Q10.2; Q11; Q14; Q31.1; R03; R14; R15; R17 to R30; R32; R34 and
international classification of diseases diagnostic codes 630 to 639.9;
660 to 669.9; 650 to 652.9 (9th revision) and O00 through to O08.9; O60
to O75.9; O80 to O84.9 (10th revision) for pregnancies resulting in a
live birth, stillbirth, termination, or miscarriage. The
database contains all details of all hospital admissions for residents
in Trent whether treatment was provided in Trent or not.
Patients were included if they were aged 19 or under at the
time of the pregnancy related hospital admission and registered with a
doctor in Trent region. Patients from Humberside were not included as
Humberside had not been part of Trent for the whole study period. It
was assumed that admissions with the same date of birth and the same
postcode arising within the same six week period related to the same
pregnancy, and duplicate entries were removed.
We collected the following variables related to teenage
pregnancies: the relevant codes from both the Office of Population
Censuses and Surveys and the international classification of diseases
(9th and 10th revisions); admission date; age; postcode; and unique
identifying code for the patients' registered general practice. The
outcome of the pregnancies was coded as termination, miscarriage, or maternity.
Data validation
To determine the completeness of our data, we compared the
total number of NHS terminations performed during 1995 in Trent with
data from the Office for National Statistics. Overall, 2472 terminations occurred in females aged 13 to 19 years in 1995 according
to data from the Office for National
Statistics13 compared with 1936 (78.3%) from our NHS data. The shortfall is probably owing to
pregnancies terminated in the private and charity sectors.
Statistical analysis
We aimed to determine the relation between teenage
pregnancy rates and general practice characteristics such as the age
and sex of the doctor and the availability of a practice nurse. The
principal outcome was the total number of terminations and deliveries
to females aged 13 to 19 years in each practice. Miscarriages were
excluded from the primary analysis as the data were incomplete
not all
miscarriages result in hospital admission. We determined the univariate
and multivariate associations with Poisson regression
analysis14 in STATA
(version 5.0). Variables such as deprivation, list size, partnership
size, rurality, general practice training status, and fundholding
status were included in the multivariate analysis because of their
potential confounding effect. All variables that reached 0.10 significance on univariate analysis were entered into the multiple
regression model. Interactions between the variables were examined. We
used
2 tests to test for differences in categorical
variables and the Mann-Whitney test for interval data. Given the number
of analyses planned, we chose a two tailed significance level of 0.01.
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Results |
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Study population
During the three year study period there were 19 805
teenage pregnancies of which 18 692 (94.4%) could be allocated to a
general practice in Trent. Of these, 10 554 (56.5%) resulted in a
delivery, 7155 (38.3%) in a termination, and 983 (5.3%) in a
miscarriage. In total, 957 (5.1%) pregnancies were to females under 16 years of age. From our NHS dataset the overall median teenage pregnancy
rate in Trent for 13 to 16 year olds was 45.0 per 1000 (interquartile
range 25.6-74.1); the rate for 13 to 15 year olds was 1.8 per 1000 (0.0-5.5).
Characteristics of general practices
In 1997 there were 826 general practices in Trent, of
which 627 (75%) were wholly, predominantly, or mainly urban according
to Carstairs' categories.12 The study practices (table 1)
had similar characteristics to other practices in England and Wales.
For example, 350 practices (42.4% of 826) did not have a female
doctor, which is comparable to the national figure of 41.7%.
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Univariate associations
Lower incidence rate ratios (lower teenage pregnancy rates) were associated with more nurse time or
female or young doctors (table 2). A young doctor (under 36 years) was defined as a doctor in the lowest quartile for age calculated from the
ages of all the general practitioners in Trent for whom we had data.
Higher teenage pregnancy rates were significantly associated with
increasing deprivation scores and fundholding status.
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Multivariate associations
On multivariate analysis, practices with at least one
female doctor, a young doctor, or more practice nurse time had
significantly lower teenage pregnancy rates (table 3). Deprivation and
fundholding remained significantly associated with higher teenage
pregnancy rates.
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Distance to family planning clinics
The distance (km) from each surgery to the nearest family
planning clinic was included in the multivariate analysis, adjusting
for each of the variables listed in table 2. Overall, practices that
were far from family planning clinics had lower teenage pregnancy rates
(adjusted incidence rate ratio 0.98, 95% confidence interval 0.97 to
0.99; P=0.001). This was mainly due to the effect of rurality since
rural practices were far from family planning clinics and had lower
rates (0.98, 0.97 to 0.99; P=0.003). In urban practices there was no
association between teenage pregnancy rates and distance from family
planning clinics (1.01, 0.99 to 1.02; P=0.15).
Analysis including miscarriages
We repeated the analyses including the number of
miscarriages in the total number of pregnancies per practice. We found
no substantial changes in the direction or significance of any of the variables.
Analysis of excluded practices
Table 1 shows the data available for each practice. It was
not possible to calculate teenage pregnancy rates in 116 practices
(14%) owing to missing denominators. The number of whole time
equivalent practice nurses was similarly unavailable for 255 practices
(31%). Practices with and without missing data were similar for all
practice characteristics under investigation.
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Discussion |
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The recent Government report on teenage pregnancy by the Social Exclusion Unit focuses almost entirely on social and educational interventions. Although these are clearly important, we argue that general practice plays a key part in the delivery of contraceptive services to teenagers. Practices with a female doctor, a young doctor, or more practice nurse time had significantly lower teenage pregnancy rates after adjustment for other factors. For example, practices with a female doctor had 91% of the teenage pregnancy rate found in other practices; practices with a doctor under 36 years had 84% of the rate; practices with both a female doctor and one under 36 years had 75% of the teenage pregnancy rate. General practices, pilots for primary care medical services, and primary care groups with high teenage pregnancy rates can consider using this information when considering recruitment strategies for medical and nursing staff in primary care.
Methodological issues
Several methodological issues need consideration. Firstly,
multiple regression analyses of general practice and sociodemographic
data can help to explain variations and unravel complex associations. A
causal relation, however, cannot be inferred from a statistical
association, particularly in a cross sectional study. Secondly, we have
used routinely collected NHS data for our study, which may be limited
in terms of accuracy and completeness.15 We did, however,
include two checks for data quality that were reassuring. We were not
able to include private terminations as the data were not available at
practice level. This may have confounded the results as the proportion
of private referrals per practice may be affected by deprivation.
Similarly the results may have been confounded by the provision and
uptake of school based contraceptive services. Thirdly, we have been
unable to identify teenagers with repeat pregnancies in the study
period. Repeat pregnancies would have resulted in an underestimate of
the standard error. It would not have affected the rate ratio but would
have made the results seem unduly significant. As our significance
levels were, however, less than 0.001, it is unlikely to have affected
our main conclusions. We repeated the analysis for each of the three
years of data, since there is less chance of multiple pregnancies
occurring to an individual within the same year. The results of the key
univariate and multivariate analyses remained unchanged. Strengths of
our study include its sample size and duration of sampling.
Teenage pregnancy and female doctors
General practices with a female partner have lower teenage
pregnancy rates than those without a female partner. As our study was
cross sectional, we do not know whether female doctors had chosen to
work in areas with low teenage pregnancy rates or whether the presence
of a female doctor influenced such rates. The association between low
teenage pregnancy rate and the presence of a female doctor may be
because female doctors tend to have longer consultations and handle
more problems per consultation16 and tend to be more
communicative17 and more patient centered.18
Female doctors report less difficulty in discussing sexual problems
with teenagers and are more likely to provide information about the
prevention of sexually transmitted diseases
19 20
and the
use of condoms.21 Our findings might be due to differences
in case mix between practices with and without a female doctor since
patients presenting to female doctors tend to be younger, more often
female,16 and more likely to have female specific problems
than those presenting to practices without a female doctor.
Teenage pregnancy and age of doctors
Practices with a young doctor have lower teenage pregnancy
rates than those without a young doctor. Although younger doctors may
be more interested in teenage health issues, little is known about the
effect of the age of the doctor on provision of teenage contraceptive
services. Younger doctors tend to have higher rates for smear uptake
and immunisation22 and order more infertility
investigations.23
Teenage pregnancy and practice nurses
Practices with more practice nurse time had significantly lower teenage pregnancy rates than those with less practice nurse time. Since 10% of all practice nurse consultations are
with teenagers24 and up to 3% of all nurse consultations are for contraceptive advice, there may be scope for further developing the practice nurse's role in the delivery of contraceptive services to
teenagers. We are unable to explain the association between fundholding
and higher teenage pregnancy rates.
Family planning services
Practices furthest from a family planning clinic had lower
teenage pregnancy rates despite adjustment for other practice
characteristics. This was mainly due to the effect of rural practices,
which were both far from a clinic and had low teenage pregnancy rates.
We found no evidence to support the introduction of more family
planning clinics in rural areas since such practices already have lower
teenage pregnancy rates.
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What is already known on this topic
Teenage conception rates in Trent are among the highest in the United Kingdom Although 70% of consultations for contraception occur in general practice, little is known about the characteristics of general practices that have high or low teenage pregnancy rates What this study addsThis cross sectional survey investigated the association between teenage pregnancy rates, the age and sex of doctors, and the availability of practice nurses Practices with a female or young doctor had significantly lower teenage pregnancy rates than those without such doctors General practices, pilots for primary care medical services, and primary care groups with high teenage pregnancy rates can consider using this information when recruiting medical and nursing staff in primary care |
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank Howard Chapman and Andy Nicholson from Trent NHS Executive for their help in accessing the hospital admissions data, and the information officers at the health authorities who were able to provide data on general practice characteristics.
Contributors: All authors were part of the project team. JH-C developed the original idea by MP, had a major input into the study design, did some of the data collection and manipulation, designed and did the analysis, interpreted the results, and wrote the paper; she will act as guarantor for the paper. JA contributed to the design of the study, did the literature review and some of the data collection, checked the data analysis, and commented on the paper. MP conceived the idea for the project and contributed to the design, interpretation of the results, and writing of the paper. DE did the geographical data processing and spatial analysis. MM contributed to the interpretation of the results and the data validation. DC commented on the paper. SB was the nurse adviser. Carol Coupland provided advice on the interpretation of the regression analysis and the potential statistical effect of repeated pregnancies to teenagers.
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Footnotes |
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Dave Ebdon has died since this paper was written
Funding: Grant from Trent NHS Executive.
Competing interests: None declared.
website extra: Additional references appear on the BMJ's website www.bmj.com
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References |
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(Accepted 7 December 1999)
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