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2 Results
- CommentaryOpen Access
Social Norms Measurement: Catching up With Programs and Moving the Field Forward
Journal of Adolescent HealthVol. 64Issue 4SupplementS4–S6Published in issue: April, 2019- Elizabeth Costenbader
- Beniamino Cislaghi
- Cari Jo Clark
- Laura Hinson
- Rachel Lenzi
- Donna R. McCarraher
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 17To date, there are numerous normative change programs for AYSRH in the field and going to scale [1]. Many of these are doing so, however, with scant evidence of the desired normative change outcomes, resulting largely from the fact that social norms' measurement has lagged behind [2,3]. As programs are developed to shift social norms to improve adolescent and youth sexual and reproductive health (AYSRH) outcomes, rigorous but practical approaches are needed to identify the social norms that are influencing behaviors, measure changes in social norms, and understand how these changes impact behavioral outcomes. - CommentaryOpen Access
Proposing a Conceptual Framework to Address Social Norms That Influence Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health
Journal of Adolescent HealthVol. 64Issue 4SupplementS7–S9Published in issue: April, 2019- Julie Pulerwitz
- Robert Blum
- Beniamino Cislaghi
- Elizabeth Costenbader
- Caroline Harper
- Lori Heise
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 52With 1.8 billion young people aged 10–24 years in the world today, the cohort of adolescents and youth is the largest in history. Concurrently, millions of adolescents are confronting sexual and reproductive health (SRH) challenges, including high rates of unmet need for contraception, unintended pregnancy, and clandestine and unsafe abortion [1]. Social norms—or shared understandings of how oneself and others should behave—can alleviate or exacerbate these challenges. Rapid global changes over the past 25 years have increased the spotlight on the interrelationships between social norms, health, and development [2–4].