Rosenberg Molly, Pettifor Audrey, Miller William C, Thirumurthy Harsha, Emch Michael, Afolabi Sulaimon A, Kahn Kathleen, Collinson Mark, Tollman Stephen
Department of Epidemiology, Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, NC, USA, Center for Population and Development Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA USA,
Department of Epidemiology, Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, NC, USA, MRC/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit (Agincourt), School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Int J Epidemiol. 2015 Jun;44(3):928-36. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyv007. Epub 2015 Feb 24.
Sexual activity may be less likely to occur during periods of school enrolment because of the structured and supervised environment provided, the education obtained and the safer peer networks encountered while enrolled. We examined whether school enrolment was associated with teen pregnancy in South Africa.
Using longitudinal demographic surveillance data from the rural Agincourt sub-district, we reconstructed the school enrolment status from 2000 through 2011 for 15 457 young women aged 12-18 years and linked them to the estimated conception date for each pregnancy during this time. We examined the effect of time-varying school enrolment on teen pregnancy using a Cox proportional hazard model, adjusting for: age; calendar year; household socioeconomic status; household size; and gender, educational attainment and employment of household head. A secondary analysis compared the incidence of pregnancy among school enrolees by calendar time: school term vs school holiday.
School enrolment was associated with lower teen pregnancy rates [adjusted hazard ratio (95% confidence interval): 0.57 (0.50, 0.65)].This association was robust to potential misclassification of school enrolment. For those enrolled in school, pregnancy occurred less commonly during school term than during school holidays [incidence rate ratio (95% confidence interval): 0.90 (0.78, 1.04)].
Young women who drop out of school may be at higher risk for teen pregnancy and could likely benefit from receipt of accessible and high quality sexual health services. Preventive interventions designed to keep young women in school or addressing the underlying causes of dropout may also help reduce the incidence of teen pregnancy.
由于在校期间有结构化且受监督的环境、所接受的教育以及所遇到的更安全的同伴网络,在校期间发生性行为的可能性可能较低。我们研究了在南非入学是否与青少年怀孕有关。
利用来自农村阿金库尔分区的纵向人口监测数据,我们重建了2000年至2011年期间15457名12 - 18岁年轻女性的入学状况,并将她们与这段时间内每次怀孕的估计受孕日期相联系。我们使用Cox比例风险模型研究随时间变化的入学情况对青少年怀孕的影响,并对以下因素进行了调整:年龄;日历年份;家庭社会经济地位;家庭规模;以及户主的性别、教育程度和就业情况。一项二次分析按日历时间比较了在校学生中的怀孕发生率:学期与学校假期。
入学与较低的青少年怀孕率相关[调整后的风险比(95%置信区间):0.57(0.50,0.65)]。这种关联对于入学情况的潜在误分类具有稳健性。对于在校学生,怀孕在学期期间比在学校假期期间发生得更少[发病率比(95%置信区间):0.90(0.78,1.04)]。
辍学的年轻女性可能面临更高的青少年怀孕风险,并且可能会从获得可及且高质量的性健康服务中受益。旨在让年轻女性留在学校或解决辍学根本原因的预防性干预措施也可能有助于降低青少年怀孕的发生率。