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Clinical Pediatrics, Vol. 30, No. 12, 661-663 (1991)
DOI: 10.1177/000992289103001202

Delay in Obstetrical Care in Newly Diagnosed Teenage Pregnancy

Albert J. Pomeranz

Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisonsin

Steve C. Matson

Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisonsin

David B. Nelson

Professor of Pediatrics, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.

A retrospective study of 42 adolescent patients diagnosed as being pregnant between June 1987 and February 1990 at the Downtown Health Center (DHC), an inner city pediatric primary care clinic, was conducted to determine whether patients referred to a hospital-based Teen Pregnancy Clinic (TPC) were seen within a reasonable period of time. The frequency of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) was also determined when these women were initially seen at TPC. Only 5 of the 42 patients seen at DHC had a pelvic exam prior to referral. Of the 40 patients seen at TPC, 20% were not seen until four weeks or more after initial diagnosis. Fifty percent had a STD.

Pediatricians should recognize that pregnant teenagers may have a significant delay between diagnosis of pregnancy and entry into obstetrical care. Pelvic exam including cultures for STDs is recommended prior to referral.


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S. C. Matson, A. J. Pomeranz, and K. A. Kamps
Early Detection and Treatment of Sexually Transmitted Disease in Pregnant Adolescents of Low Socioeconomic Status
Clinical Pediatrics, October 1, 1993; 32(10): 609 - 612.
[Abstract] [PDF]