Center for Social Research, University of Malawi, P.O. Box 280, Zomba, Malawi.
Sexual, Reproductive, Maternal, New-Born, Child and Adolescent Health (SRMNCAH) Unit, African Population and Health Research Center, Manga Close, Nairobi, Kenya.
Reprod Health. 2023 Aug 6;20(1):114. doi: 10.1186/s12978-023-01655-3.
Pregnancy and childbearing in adolescence could negatively affect girls' health and socio-economic wellbeing across the life course. Previous studies on drivers of adolescent pregnancy in Africa have not fully considered the perspectives of parents/guardians vis-à-vis pregnant and parenting adolescents. Our study addresses this gap by examining pregnant and parenting adolescents' and parents/guardians' narratives about factors associated with early and unintended pregnancy.
The descriptive study draws on qualitative data collected as part of a larger mixed-methods cross-sectional survey on the lived experiences of pregnant and parenting adolescents. Data were collected between March and May 2021 in Blantyre, Malawi, using semi-structured interview guides. We interviewed 18 pregnant and parenting adolescent girls, 10 parenting adolescent boys, and 16 parents/guardians of pregnant and parenting adolescents. Recorded interviews were transcribed verbatim into the English language by bilingual transcribers. We used the inductive-thematic analytical approach to summarize the data.
The data revealed several interconnected and structural reasons for adolescents' vulnerability to early and unintended pregnancy. These include adolescents' limited knowledge and access to contraceptives, poverty, sexual violence, school dropout, COVID-19 school closures, and being young and naively engaging in unprotected sex. While some parents agreed that poverty and school dropout or COVID-19 related school closure could lead to early pregnancies, most considered stubbornness, failure to adhere to abstinence advice and peer influence as responsible for adolescent pregnancies.
Our findings contribute to the evidence on the continued vulnerability of girls to unintended pregnancy. It highlights how parents and adolescents hold different views on reasons for early and unintended pregnancy, and documents how divergent views between girls and their parents may contribute to the lack of progress in reducing adolescent childbearing. Based on these findings, preventing unintended pregnancies will require altering community attitudes about young people's use of contraceptives and engaging parents, education sector, civil society organizations and community and religious leaders to develop comprehensive sexuality education programs to empower in- and out-of school adolescents.
青春期怀孕和生育会对女孩的健康和整个生命周期的社会经济福利产生负面影响。以前在非洲研究青少年怀孕的驱动因素的研究没有充分考虑父母/监护人对怀孕和育儿青少年的看法。我们的研究通过检查怀孕和育儿青少年以及父母/监护人对与早期和意外怀孕相关因素的叙述来解决这一差距。
该描述性研究利用了作为关于怀孕和育儿青少年生活经历的更大规模混合方法横断面调查的一部分收集的定性数据。数据于 2021 年 3 月至 5 月在马拉维布兰太尔收集,使用半结构化访谈指南。我们采访了 18 名怀孕和育儿的青少年女孩、10 名育儿的青少年男孩和 16 名怀孕和育儿青少年的父母/监护人。双语转录员将记录的访谈逐字转录为英文。我们使用归纳主题分析方法来总结数据。
数据揭示了青少年易受早期和意外怀孕影响的几个相互关联和结构性原因。这些原因包括青少年获取避孕知识和避孕措施的机会有限、贫困、性暴力、辍学、与 COVID-19 相关的学校关闭以及年轻和天真地进行无保护性行为。虽然一些父母同意贫困和辍学或与 COVID-19 相关的学校关闭可能导致早期怀孕,但大多数人认为固执、不遵守禁欲建议和同伴影响是导致青少年怀孕的原因。
我们的研究结果有助于证明女孩仍然容易意外怀孕的证据。它强调了父母和青少年对早期和意外怀孕原因的看法不同,并记录了女孩和她们的父母之间的不同观点如何可能导致减少青少年生育的进展缺乏。基于这些发现,防止意外怀孕需要改变社区对年轻人使用避孕药具的态度,并让父母、教育部门、民间社会组织以及社区和宗教领袖参与制定全面的性教育计划,以使在校内外的青少年都能获得赋权。