INFANT SIMULATOR IS NOT EFFECTIVE TO PREVENT TEEN PREGNANCY

The baby simulator is not effective to prevent teen pregnancy. Firstly, the infant simulator program increases teen pregnancy because of implementing this simulator program to the education system. According to Brinkman, Johnson, Codde, Hart, Straton, Mittinty, and Silburn (2016) argue that the infant simulator-based VIP program achieved the opposite effect. They also argue that the risk of teenage pregnancy after the use of baby simulator dolls in health care education does not go down but increased. Secondly, teen pregnancy may have increased because of the baby simulator-based VIP program just too interesting to the schoolgirls. According to Brinkman et al. (2016) state that a lot of the students really enjoyed the VIP program, there was a lot of positivity around the program which might reinforce their desire to have a baby. In conclusion, the infant simulator program does not have a long term effect of reducing teenage pregnancy.

However, some people may argue that the baby simulator program is extremely effective in preventing teen pregnancy. According to RealityWorks (n.d.) reports that teenage girls who used infant simulator in their health care classes it changed their mind to get pregnant after experiencing the intensive curriculum. Teen girls experienced the real truth of maintaining a child and got experience from the simulation program to manage to finance to grow the children in the future.

There are two reasons with the argument that infant simulator is ineffective to prevent teen pregnancy; the study is not scientific, and it may be biased. First, the simulator program from RealityWorks they did not conduct any scientific research before implementing their program to the education system. As a result, the infant simulator-based VIP program may be achieved the opposite effect. Second, RealityWork may be biased to their study. RealityWorks is one of the top manufacturers of infant simulators in the US and the simulators currently used by more than 40,000 institutions worldwide. It may have a connection to increase their revenue by selling baby simulators to institutions. It may use for the wrong purpose. As a result, it may not effective to prevent teen pregnancy.

References
Brinkman, S.A., Johnson, S. E., Codde, J.P., Hart, M.B., Starton, J. A., Mittinty, M.N. & Silburn, S.R. (2016). Effeciency of infant simulator programmes to prevent teenage pregnancy: a school-based cluster randomized controlled trail in Western Australia. Lancet 2016. 388, 2264-2271. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(16)30384-1

High school health class uses infant simulators for teen pregnancy prevention. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.realityworks.com/high-school-health-class-uses-infant-simulators-for-teen-pregnancy-prevention/

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