Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, School of Medicine, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Health Policy Planning and Management, Makerere university School of Public Health, Kampala, Uganda.
Reprod Health. 2020 May 26;17(1):74. doi: 10.1186/s12978-020-00925-8.
Uganda has high adolescent pregnancy. The details of adolescent childbirth and urban/rural patterns are scarce. We investigated the levels, time trends and determinants of adolescent childbirth in Uganda separately for urban and rural women.
We estimated the percentage of women 20-24 years at each of the six Uganda Demographic and Health Surveys (1988/89, 1995, 2000/01, 2006, 2011 and 2016) who reported a live childbirth before age 20 years ("adolescent childbirth"), and examined change over time using t-test. A modified multivariable Poisson regression was used to examine determinants of having adolescent childbirth on the 2016 survey.
Among these women, 67.5, 66.4, 70.1, 62.3, 57.3 and 54.1% reported an adolescent childbirth in 1988/89, 1995, 2000/01, 2006, 2011 and 2016 surveys, respectively. Between 1988/89 to 2000/01, there was no evidence of change (+ 2.6% point (pp), p = 0.170), unlike between the 2000/01 and 2016 surveys when a significant decline occurred (- 16.0 pp., p < 0.001). First childbirth < 18 years of age declined by - 13.5 pp. (p < 0.001) between 2000/01 and 2016. There was no change over time in the percentage of adolescents 18-19.9 years of age having first childbirth. Among rural residents, childbirth < 18 years declined from 43.8% in 1988/89 to 32.7% in 2016 (- 11.1 pp., p < 0.001), in urban it declined from 28.3 to 18.2% (- 10.1 pp., p = 0.006). There was an increase over time in the percentage of women, both rural and urban, who wanted to delay their first pregnancy. Independent determinants of reporting an adolescent childbirth in both urban and rural residents were: no education/incomplete primary and younger age at first sex. Additional determinants for rural women were residence in Eastern region, Muslim religion, and poor household wealth index.
In the 30-year period examined, adolescent childbirth in Uganda declined from highs of 7 in 10 to approximately 5 in 10 women, with more wanting to delay the pregnancy. The decline started after the 2000/01 survey and affected predominantly younger adolescent childbirth < 18 years among both rural and urban residence women. Efforts need to be intensified to sustain the decline in adolescent pregnancies. Targeted and specific strategies for urban and rural areas might be required.
乌干达少女怀孕率较高。关于少女分娩的详细情况和城乡模式的信息却很匮乏。我们分别对乌干达城乡女性的少女分娩水平、时间趋势和决定因素进行了调查。
我们计算了每一次乌干达六次人口与健康调查(1988/89 年、1995 年、2000/01 年、2006 年、2011 年和 2016 年)中 20-24 岁的女性中报告在 20 岁之前有过活产的比例(“少女分娩”),并使用 t 检验来观察随时间的变化。使用修正后的多变量泊松回归来检查 2016 年调查中少女分娩的决定因素。
在这些女性中,1988/89 年、1995 年、2000/01 年、2006 年、2011 年和 2016 年调查中分别有 67.5%、66.4%、70.1%、62.3%、57.3%和 54.1%报告了少女分娩。1988/89 年至 2000/01 年期间,没有证据表明这一比例有变化(+2.6 个百分点,p=0.170),而在 2000/01 年至 2016 年期间,这一比例显著下降(-16.0 个百分点,p<0.001)。18 岁以下的首次分娩年龄下降了-13.5 个百分点(p<0.001)。2000/01 年至 2016 年期间,18-19.9 岁青少年首次分娩的比例没有随时间变化。在农村居民中,1988/89 年的少女分娩率为 43.8%,2016 年降至 32.7%(-11.1 个百分点,p<0.001),城市居民中,少女分娩率从 28.3%降至 18.2%(-10.1 个百分点,p=0.006)。城乡妇女都希望推迟首次怀孕的比例随时间增加。城乡居民报告少女分娩的独立决定因素是:没有教育/未完成小学教育和初次性行为年龄较小。农村妇女的其他决定因素包括居住在东部地区、穆斯林宗教和贫困家庭财富指数较低。
在过去 30 年中,乌干达少女分娩率从每 10 名妇女中约 7 人下降到约 5 人,更多的人希望推迟怀孕。这种下降始于 2000/01 年调查之后,主要影响到城乡年轻少女的少女分娩率,即 18 岁以下的少女。需要加强努力,维持少女怀孕率的下降。可能需要针对城乡地区制定有针对性和具体的战略。