Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Kenya Medical Research Institute, Center for Clinical Research, Thika, Kenya.
PLoS One. 2021 Aug 12;16(8):e0255954. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0255954. eCollection 2021.
Despite significant public health emphasis on unintended pregnancy prevention among adolescent girls and young women in Sub-Saharan Africa, there is a gap in understanding how adolescents' own reproductive priorities and the social influences on their decision-making align and compete. We examined the social context of contraceptive decision-making among Kenyan female adolescents.
Using community-based sampling, we conducted 40 in-depth interviews and 6 focus group discussions among sexually-active or partnered adolescent girls and young women aged 15-19 in the Nyanza region of Kenya. We analyzed the data in Dedoose using an inductive, grounded theory approach, and developed a conceptual model from the data illustrating social influences on adolescent contraceptive decision-making.
Participants viewed adolescent pregnancy as unacceptable, and described severe social, financial, and health consequences of unintended pregnancy, including abortion under unsafe conditions. Yet, their contraceptive behaviors often did not reflect their desire to delay pregnancy. Contraceptive decision-making was influenced by multiple social factors, centering on the intersecting stigmas of adolescent female sexuality, pregnancy, and contraceptive use, as well as unequal power in sexual relationships. To prioritize pregnancy prevention, adolescents must navigate conflicting social norms and power dynamics, and put their perceived future fertility at risk.
Contraceptive decision-making among Kenyan female adolescents is strongly influenced by opposing social norms within families, communities, and sexual relationships, which compel them to risk stigma whether they use a contraceptive method or become pregnant as adolescents. These findings put into perspective adolescents' seemingly incongruent pregnancy preferences and contraceptive behaviors. Interventions to address adolescent unintended pregnancy should focus on supporting adolescent decision-making agency, addressing fertility-related contraceptive concerns, and promoting innovative contraceptive access points rather than increasing contraceptive prevalence.
尽管撒哈拉以南非洲地区高度重视防止少女和年轻妇女意外怀孕,但人们对于青少年自身的生殖优先事项以及影响他们决策的社会因素如何一致和相互竞争,仍缺乏了解。我们研究了肯尼亚青春期少女避孕决策的社会背景。
我们在肯尼亚的 Nyanza 地区采用基于社区的抽样方法,对 40 名有性行为或伴侣的 15-19 岁性活跃或有伴侣的青春期少女和年轻女性进行了 40 次深入访谈和 6 次焦点小组讨论。我们在 Dedoose 中使用归纳法、扎根理论方法对数据进行了分析,并从数据中开发了一个说明社会因素对青少年避孕决策影响的概念模型。
参与者认为少女怀孕是不可接受的,并描述了意外怀孕的严重社会、经济和健康后果,包括在不安全条件下堕胎。然而,他们的避孕行为往往并不反映他们想要延迟怀孕的愿望。避孕决策受到多种社会因素的影响,这些因素集中在少女女性性行为、怀孕和避孕使用的交叉污名化以及性关系中不平等的权力上。为了优先考虑预防怀孕,青少年必须在相互冲突的社会规范和权力动态中进行导航,并冒着他们认为未来生育能力的风险。
肯尼亚青春期少女的避孕决策受到家庭、社区和性关系中相互矛盾的社会规范的强烈影响,这迫使她们冒着污名化的风险,无论她们是否使用避孕方法或作为青少年怀孕。这些发现使我们能够正确看待青少年看似不一致的怀孕偏好和避孕行为。解决青少年意外怀孕问题的干预措施应侧重于支持青少年的决策机构、解决与生育有关的避孕问题,并促进创新的避孕接触点,而不是提高避孕普及率。