Adolescent Pregnancy
Adolescent pregnancy in ninety nine percent of the cases is
unwanted and is the major consequence of adolescent sexual
activity, other than STDs. This issue has affected youth,
families, educators, health care professionals, and government
official. A study on the high school adolescents has concluded
that forty eight percent of the males and forty five percent of
the females are sexually active. One fourth of the high school
students had sexual contact by fifteen years of age. The
average age of boys is sixteen and a girl is seventeen, who
have had intercourse. Ninety percent of adolescents, in the age
range of fifteen to nineteen, say their pregnancy is
unintended.
Seventy four percent of females above fourteen years and
sixty percent of females below fifteen years have reported to
have involuntary sex. Fifty percent of the adolescent
pregnancies are within the time period of six months after the
initial sexual intercourse. More than nine hundred thousand
teenagers are reported to have become pregnant every year in
the United States. Fifty one percent of the adolescent
pregnancies result in live birth, thirty five percent result in
induced abortion and fourteen percent result in stillbirths or
miscarriages. Four out of ten adolescent females get pregnant,
before they turn twenty, at least once. Twenty five percent of
adolescent deliveries arent the mothers first child. When a
teenager gives birth to her first child, she increases the risk
of begetting another child. One third of the adolescent parents
are themselves result of adolescent
pregnancies.
There are many reasons why adolescents choose to become
sexually active at an early stage in life. The reasons can be
early pubertal development, poverty, sexual abuse in childhood,
lack of parents attention, lack of career goals, family and
cultural patterns of early sex, substance abuse, dropping out
from school and poor school performance. Factors which
discourage an adolescent to become sexually active are stable
family environment, parental supervision, good family income,
regular prayers, connectedness with parents and living with
complete family and both the parents. The factors which are
responsible for the consistent use of contraceptive among
adolescents are academic success, anticipation for successful
future, and involvement in a stable relationship.
There are many medical risks associated with adolescent
pregnancies. Adolescents who are less than seventeen years are
at a greater risk of developing medical complications, when
compared to adult females. The risk is even more in teenagers
below seventeen. The weight of the child, given birth by an
adolescent, is very low in these pregnancies. It is usually
below 2.5 kilogram. The rate of neonatal birth is also three
times greater in adolescents, when compared to adults. Other
problems caused by adolescent pregnancies are prematurity of
the child, birth of underweight child, poor maternal weight
gain, poor nutritional status, anemia, STDs and hypertension
induced due to pregnancy.
Although there is an increase in the use of contraceptive
methods by adolescents during their first sexual contact, only
sixty three percent of the high school students have said to
use condom while having sex previously. Adolescents, who use
prescription contraceptives, delay their doctors visit until
the time they become sexually active for over a year.
According to a research, youngsters who have participated in
sex education programs which gave them knowledge about
contraception methods, abstinence, sexually transmitted
diseases and youngsters who involved in discussions in order to
get a clear picture, used contraceptives and condoms
effectively without any increase in sexual activity. The Center
for Disease Control & Prevention has said that the solution
for unwanted adolescent pregnancies and STDs are barrier
contraceptive use and abstinence.
|