Week 1
Adolescent pregnancy
Birth rates
There has been a marked, although
uneven, decrease in the birth rates among adolescent girls since 1990, but some
11% of all births worldwide are still to girls aged 15 to 19 years old. The
vast majority of these births (95%) occur in low- and middle-income countries.
The 2014 World Health Statistics
indicate that the average global birth rate among 15 to 19 year olds is 49 per
1000 girls. Country rates range from 1 to 299 births per 1000 girls, with the
highest rates in sub-Saharan Africa.
Adolescent pregnancy remains a
major contributor to maternal and child mortality, and to the cycle of ill-health
and poverty.
Contexts
For some adolescents, pregnancy and
childbirth are planned and wanted, but for many they are not. Adolescent
pregnancies are more likely in poor, uneducated and rural communities. In some
countries, becoming pregnant outside marriage is not uncommon. By contrast,
some girls may face social pressure to marry and, once married, to have
children. More than 30% of girls in low- and middle-income countries marry
before they are 18; around 14% before they are 15.
Some girls do not know how to avoid
getting pregnant: sex education is lacking in many countries. They may feel too
inhibited or ashamed to seek contraception services; contraceptives may be too
expensive or not widely or legally available. Even when contraceptives are widely
available, sexually active adolescent girls are less likely to use them than
adults. Girls may be unable to refuse unwanted sex or resist coerced sex, which
tends to be unprotected.
Health effects
Pregnancy and childbirth
complications are the second cause of death among 15 to 19 year olds globally.
However, there have been significant drops in the number of deaths in all
regions since 2000, most notably in South-East Asia where mortality rates fell
from 21 to 9 per 100 000 girls. Some 3 million unsafe abortions among girls
aged 15 to 19 take place each year, contributing to maternal deaths and to
lasting health problems.
Early childbearing increases the
risks for both mothers and their newborns. In low- and middle-income countries,
babies born to mothers under 20 years of age face a 50% higher risk of being
still born or dying in the first few weeks versus those born to mothers aged
20-29. The younger the mother, the greater the risk to the baby. Newborns born
to adolescent mothers are also more likely to have low birth weight, with the
risk of long-term effects.
Economic and social consequences
Adolescent pregnancy can also have
negative social and economic effects on girls, their families and communities.
Many girls who become pregnant have to drop out of school. A girl with little
or no education has fewer skills and opportunities to find a job. This can also
have an economic cost with a country losing out on the annual income a young
woman would have earned over her lifetime, if she had not had an early
pregnancy.
WHO response
WHO published guidelines in 2011
with the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) on preventing early pregnancies and
reducing poor reproductive outcomes. These made recommendations for action that
countries could take, with 6 main objectives:
·
reducing marriage before the age of 18;
·
creating understanding and support to reduce pregnancy
before the age of 20;
·
increasing the use of contraception by adolescents at
risk of unintended pregnancy;
·
reducing coerced sex among adolescents;
·
reducing unsafe abortion among adolescents;
·
increasing use of skilled antenatal, childbirth and
postnatal care among adolescents.
WHO is also involved in a variety
of joint efforts with related agencies and programmes, such as the “H4+”
initiative that includes UNAIDS, UNFPA, UNICEF, UN Women and the World Bank.
The H4+ aims to to accelerate progress towards achieving Millennium Development
Goals 4 (reducing child mortality) and 5 (improving maternal health) by 2015.
It tackles the root causes of maternal, newborn and child mortality and
morbidity—among them gender inequality, child marriage and limited access to
education for girls. H4+ aligns closely with national health plans and provides
some financial and technical support to governments.
Personal opinion
In all the world there are cases of pregnant adolescents girls for fun have sex without knowing the methods anticonseptivos, many times it is also a lack of knowledge or ignorance that causes these girls become mothers at a very early age.
Andrea Martinéz Duran
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