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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2020 Mar 1.
Published in final edited form as: Am J Health Promot. 2018 Aug 1;33(3):457–467. doi: 10.1177/0890117118791118

Table 2.

High School Condom Availability Program Characteristics

CAP State Urban Evaluation Citations Parental Consent to Receive Condom Received Condoms Confidentially Educational Material Provided with Condom Location of Condoms in Schools Sexual Health Programing in School Donation Solicited for Condom
Los Angeles Unified School District CA Yes De Rosa et al., 2012 Passive . Yes . Yes No
Los Angeles County CA Yes Schuster et al., 1997; Schuster et al., 1998 None Yes Yes Classroom, nurse’s office Yes Yes
Adams City High CO No Wolk & Rosenbaum, 1995 Consent was required but did not specify if it was passive or active Yes Yes Classroom, nurse’s office, community health services office Yes No
Massachusetts a MA . Blake et al., 2003 . . . . . No
Holyoke a MA No Wretzel, Visintainer & Koenigs, 2011 . . . . . No
New York City Schools NY Yes Guttmacher et al., 1995; Guttmacher et al., 1997; Guttmacher, Lieberman & Ward, 1998 Passive Yes Yes Classroom Yes No
School District of Philadelphia PA Yes Furstenberg et al., 1997 Passive . Yes School-based health center, classroom, or office space Yes No
Seattle Public School District WA Yes Brown, Pennylegion & Hillard, 1997; Kirby et al., 1999 None Yesb Yes School-based health center, vending machines in different places such as nurse’s office, activities center, or hallway Yes Yes
a

Programmatic descriptions were not provided for these two CAPs.

b

At least one location allowed students to receive condoms confidentially.