Adolescent pregnancy in Argentina: evidence-based recommendations for public policies.Abstract: In Argentina adolescent pregnancy adolescent pregnancy See Teenage pregnancy. is still regarded as a public health problem or a "social epidemic': However, it is necessary to ask from which perspective and for whom it is a problem, and what type of problem. This article presents the findings of a large quantitative and qualitative study conducted in five Northern provinces and two metropolitan areas of Argentina in 2003-2004. Based on the results of a survey of adolescent mothers (n= 1,645) and ten focus group discussions with adolescent girls and boys, it addresses the connections between school dropout (1) On magnetic media, a bit that has lost its strength due to a surface defect or recording malfunction. If the bit is in an audio or video file, it might be detected by the error correction circuitry and either corrected or not, but if not, it is often not noticed by the human , pregnancy and poverty, and makes recommendations on how to tailor health care and sexuality education to address local realities. The findings indicate a need to develop educational activities to promote safer sex and address gender power relations in programmes working with deprived communities. Sexuality education with a gender and rights perspective, and increasing accessibility to contraceptive methods Noun 1. contraceptive method - birth control by the use of devices (diaphragm or intrauterine device or condom) or drugs or surgery contraception birth control, birth prevention, family planning - limiting the number of children born for adolescent girls and boys is also crucial. Antenatal an·te·na·tal adj. See prenatal. antenatal before parturition. Called also prenatal, antepartal. and post-partum care, as well as post-abortion care, should be improved for young women and viewed as opportunities for contraceptive contraceptive /con·tra·cep·tive/ (-sep´tiv) 1. diminishing the likelihood of or preventing conception. 2. an agent that so acts. counselling and provision. Male participation in pregnancy prevention and care also needs to be promoted. [c] 2008 Reproductive Health Within the framework of WHO's definition of health[1] as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, reproductive health, or sexual health/hygiene Matters. All rights reserved. Keywords: adolescents and young people, education, antenatal care, contraception contraception: see birth control. contraception Birth control by prevention of conception or impregnation. The most common method is sterilization. The most effective temporary methods are nearly 99% effective if used consistently and correctly. and unplanned pregnancy, Argentina Resume En Argentine, les grossesses d'adolescentes sont encore considerees comme un probleme de sante publique ou une << epidemie sociale >>. Il faut neanmoins se demander dans quelle perspective et pour qui elles constituent un probleme, et quel type de probleme elles representent. Cet article donne les conclusions d'une vaste etude e·tude n. Music 1. A piece composed for the development of a specific point of technique. 2. A composition featuring a point of technique but performed because of its artistic merit. quantitative et qualitative realisee dans cinq provinces septentrionales et deux zones metropolitaines de l'Argentine en 2003-2004. Base sur les resultats d'une enquete aupres de meres adolescentes (n=1645) et dix groupes de discussion thematique avec des adolescents des deux sexes, il aborde les relations entre l'abandon scolaire, la grossesse et la pauvrete et formule des recommandations sur l'adaptation des soins de sante et de l'education sexuelle aux realites locales. Les programmes travaillant avec des communautes defavorisees doivent preparer des activites educatives pour promouvoir des rapports sexuels proteges et aborder les relations de pouvoir entre hommes et femmes. Il est egalement crucial de dispenser une education sexuelle dans une perspective de droits et d'egalite entre les sexes, et de garantir aux filles et aux garcons un acces elargi aux methodes contraceptives. Les soins prenatals et post-partum, ainsi que les soins apres avortement, doivent etre ameliores pour les jeunes femmes et consideres comme des occasions de les conseiller et de leur remettre des contraceptifs. La participation masculine a la prevention et aux soins de la grossesse doit aussi etre encouragee. Resumen En Argentina, el embarazo en la adolescencia continua con·tin·u·a n. A plural of continuum. percibiendose como un problema de salud publica o una "epidemia social". Sin embargo embargo (ĕmbär`gō), prohibition by a country of the departure of ships or certain types of goods from its ports. Instances of confining all domestic ships to port are rare, and the Embargo Act of 1807 is the sole example of this in , es necesario preguntar de que punto de vista y para quien es un problema, y que tipo de problema. En este articulo articulo /ar·tic·u·lo/ (ahr-tik´u-lo) [L.] at the moment, or crisis. articulo mor´tis at the point or moment of death. se presentan los resultados de un estudio importante cuantitativo y cualitativo realizado en cinco provincias septentrionales y dos zonas metropolitanas de Argentina, en 2003-2004. Basado en los resultados de una encuesta entre madres adolescentes (n=1,645) y diez discusiones de grupos locales con ninas y ninos adolescentes, el articulo trata las conexiones entre el abandono de estudios, el embarazo y la pobreza, y ofrece recomendaciones sobre como adaptar la educacion sexual y la educacion sobre la atencion de la salud conforme a las realidades locales. Los hallazgos indican indican /in·di·can/ (in´di-kan) potassium indoxyl sulfate, formed by decomposition of tryptophan in the intestines and excreted in the urine. in·di·can n. la necesidad de crear actividades educativas para promover relaciones sexuales mas seguras y tratar las relaciones de poder entre los sexos en programas que trabajan con comunidades carenciadas. Es imperativo impartir educacion sexual con un punto de vista de genero y derechos, y ampliar el acceso de la adolescencia a los metodos anticonceptivos. Se debe mejorar la atencion antenatal y posparto, asi como la atencion postaborto, para las mujeres jovenes, y estos servicios deben verse como oportunidades para brindar consejeria anticonceptiva y suministrar metodos anticonceptivos. Ademas, se debe promover la participacion del hombre en la prevencion y atencion del embarazo. ********** IN Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. , pregnancy during adolescence became an issue in the 1970s, a decade later than in Europe and the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . The construction of adolescent pregnancy as a "social problem" was the result of a variety of factors: the absolute and relative growth of the adolescent population, a smaller reduction in adolescent fertility than in adult women; the increased medicalisation of pregnancy and increased access to health care services by low-income sectors, which gave adolescent mothers greater social visibility; social and cultural changes; and particularly adults' preoccupation with sexual activity among young people. (1-3) In Argentina, the adolescent fertility rate Noun 1. fertility rate - the ratio of live births in an area to the population of that area; expressed per 1000 population per year birth rate, birthrate, fertility, natality (age 15-19 years) is around 62 per 1,000, lower than the average rate of Latin America and the Caribbean (72.4 per 1,000), lower also than that of neighbouring countries Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, but significantly higher than Chile (43.6). Although the rate has steadily declined since 1980, when it peaked at 78 per 1,000, it has not yet fallen back to the levels observed at the beginning of the 1960s (58.4). (4) In order to better contextualise these data, it is worth taking into account that Argentina's reproductive health indicators are relatively poor given the development of its public health system and the resources allocated to health (21.3% of the national budget). For instance, its maternal mortality rate maternal mortality rate Epidemiology The number of pregnancy-related deaths/100,000 ♀ of reproductive age; the number of maternal deaths related to childbearing divided by number of live births–or number of live births + fetal deaths/yr. (46 per 100,000 births) is higher than that of its neighbours Chile and Uruguay, countries that spend a lower proportion of their budgets on health care. (5) In addition, reproductive health indicators vary considerably between provinces. Despite the fact that regional differences in adolescent fertility rates have declined during the last decades, they continue to be high, currently ranging from 23.9 per 1,000 in the City of Buenos Aires Buenos Aires (bwā`nəs ī`rēz, âr`ēz, Span. bwā`nōs ī`rās), city and federal district (1991 pop. to 100 per 1,000 in the provinces of Chaco and Misiones. Annually, around 100,000 children are born to teenage mothers in the country, representing 15% of total births. Adolescent motherhood is a repeated event for a great number of women: 32.5% of adolescent mothers aged 18-19 have more than one child, and 7.6% have three or more children. (4) Even though nowadays biomedical bi·o·med·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to biomedicine. 2. Of, relating to, or involving biological, medical, and physical sciences. literature states that pregnancy is risky in biomedical terms only at a very early age (13-14 years), (6-10) the issue is still regarded as a public health problem or a "social epidemic" by public officials, physicians, the press and the general public. In addition, as Luker has shown for the US, (11) the common sense view still tends to regard adolescent pregnancy as a cause of poverty rather than as a consequence of it, and of the lack of resources and alternative projects. (1,2) There are certainly very diverse situations that fall into the category of adolescent pregnancy. In some cases, particularly among the youngest girls, pregnancy is the result of non-consensual sex (rape, incest incest, sexual relations between persons to whom marriage is prohibited by custom or law because of their close kinship. Ideas of kinship, however, vary widely from group to group, hence the definition of incest also varies. , sexual coercion coercion, in law, the unlawful act of compelling a person to do, or to abstain from doing, something by depriving him of the exercise of his free will, particularly by use or threat of physical or moral force. ). In others, lack of sexuality education and friendly health care services, as well as gender inequalities, prevent teenagers from adopting contraceptive methods or using them effectively. Other adolescents actually seek or welcome pregnancy. Taking "context" seriously into account, this article therefore aims at identifying priorities for action and providing useful data and ideas for the design of specific interventions that respond to the needs of different groups of adolescents. This is particularly relevant for Argentina, where there is a considerable disconnection dis·con·nect v. dis·con·nect·ed, dis·con·nect·ing, dis·con·nects v.tr. 1. To sever or interrupt the connection of or between: disconnected the hose. 2. between what researchers know and what decision-makers, politicians and the general public think are the facts about adolescent pregnancy. Our research has elicited adolescents' perspectives and included the views of understudied social actors: young men, educational professionals, psychologists, social workers, youth and women's health Women's Health Definition Women's health is the effect of gender on disease and health that encompasses a broad range of biological and psychosocial issues. advocates. In order to complete the picture, we seek to consider the long-term impact of adolescent motherhood and fatherhood. (12-14) In short, we will try to provide some answers to the question from which perspective and for whom adolescent pregnancy is a problem, and what type of problem. (12) About the research project This article summarises some of the results of a larger research project developed by CEDES CEDES Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad (Argentina) CEDES Comisión de Ecología y Desarrollo Sustentable del Estado de Sonora (Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad, Buenos Aires, Argentina) at the request of the National Ministry of Health and Environment, which supported the study together with UNICEF-Argentina. CEDES took up this research at a very peculiar socio-economic and political time. Argentina was undergoing one of its most serious social, economical and political crises (2001/2002). 48% of the population were living in poverty, and the unemployment rate had reached 19%. In October 2002, soon after the Ministry of Health declared a "public health emergency", the Senate finally approved a bill creating the National Programme on Sexual Health and Responsible Procreation PROCREATION. The generation of children; it is an act authorized by the law of nature: one of the principal ends of marriage is the procreation of children. Inst. tit. 2, in pr. within the National Ministry of Health (Law 25.673). This was a turning point and a significant step forward since, for the first time in decades, the State officially acknowledged that sexual and reproductive health issues were a priority and showed political will to implement actions in this field. The fact that the adolescent fertility rate was high in many Northern provinces and that adolescent motherhood is a repeated event for a great number of teenagers motivated the official request for evidence to better inform policy. The project was carried out in the capital cities of five poor northern provinces--Salta, Misiones, Chaco, Tucuman and Catamarca--and the two largest metropolitan areas--Buenos Aires and Rosario--between August 2003 and July 2004. It aimed at updating relevant data, filling information gaps and understanding the perspectives of relevant stakeholders Stakeholders All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers, management, the community, and the government. (policymakers, health care providers, male and female adolescents). Sites were selected taking into account adolescent fertility rates, the proportion of deliveries in women aged 15-19 to total deliveries and other key reproductive health indicators (e.g. maternal and infant mortality (hardware) infant mortality - It is common lore among hackers (and in the electronics industry at large) that the chances of sudden hardware failure drop off exponentially with a machine's time since first use (that is, until the relatively distant time at which enough mechanical ). The final purpose was to inform policies and programmes aimed at preventing unplanned adolescent pregnancy and its repetition and improving the quality of health care provided to pregnant teens. The study had two main components. First, a socio-demographic analysis based on special tabulations of the last national census (2001) and vital statistics. (4) Second, a local situational diagnosis that was built upon: * Interviews with key informants (managers from Health, Education and Social Development Departments, Women's and Youth Secretaries, health care providers and NGO NGO abbr. nongovernmental organization Noun 1. NGO - an organization that is not part of the local or state or federal government nongovernmental organization representatives and community leaders). We explored their opinions regarding the main problems adolescents face and particularly their perspectives on adolescent pregnancy, motherhood and fatherhood and strategies to prevent or address the issue. * A survey among young women aged 15-19 who had just given birth in 14 public health sector facilities in the study sites during the two months from December 2003 to February 2004. In each capital city, interviewees were recruited in the principal hospital where the vast majority of adolescent mothers give birth. In Rosario, the survey was conducted in a municipal hospital that accounts for half of the deliveries of women aged 15-19. In the metropolitan area of Buenos Aires, six hospitals were selected from different health regions with high adolescent pregnancy rates. Approximately 30% of pregnant adolescents from these regions give birth in the selected hospitals. The questionnaire had six modules: pregnancy and birth care; reproductive history reproductive history Obstetrics A set of 4 numbers that may be used to define a woman's obstetric Hx–eg, 4-3-2-1, would mean 4 term infants delivered, 3 preterm infants, 2 abortions, 1 child currently living ; contraceptive knowledge and method use; situation at the time of the first live birth; expectations for the future and socio-demographic profile. It was administered by women health workers, mostly midwives, who were trained on-site and later supervised by CEDES researchers. For ethical reasons, adolescents whose babies or who themselves were in the intensive care unit, adolescents whose babies were stillbirths or those with a mental disorder mental disorder Any illness with a psychological origin, manifested either in symptoms of emotional distress or in abnormal behaviour. Most mental disorders can be broadly classified as either psychoses or neuroses (see neurosis; psychosis). Psychoses (e.g. were not invited to participate in the survey. Informed consent, explaining the purpose of the study and asking for their participation, was obtained from all interviewees. * Focus groups with male and female adolescents (with and without children), conducted by same sex CEDES researchers, were used to explore teenagers' views and experiences regarding contraception, abortion, pregnancy and motherhood and fatherhood. Some results from the survey of young mothers were also discussed in the focus groups to improve our understanding of their meaning. Based on the survey and the focus group findings, this article addresses the connections between school dropout, pregnancy and poverty, reconstructs adolescents' reproductive stories and makes recommendations on how to tailor health care and sexuality education to address local realities. Additionally, we highlight how the data help to deconstruct de·con·struct tr.v. de·con·struct·ed, de·con·struct·ing, de·con·structs 1. To break down into components; dismantle. 2. some deeply-rooted stereotypes. Survey and focus group participants Of a total of 1,881 deliveries of adolescents aged 15-19 that took place in the study period, 1,645 young women were surveyed. Of the 236 who were not interviewed, 183 fell into the pre-established exclusion criteria exclusion criteria AIDS Donor exclusion criteria, see there , 45 left the hospital before they could be contacted by the interviewer and eight refused to participate. The average age of the respondents was 17.5; 57% were ages 18 and 19. Some 36% had complete primary school or less; 52% had not completed secondary school and 12% had completed secondary school or more. More than half (55%) lived in overcrowded o·ver·crowd v. o·ver·crowd·ed, o·ver·crowd·ing, o·ver·crowds v.tr. To cause to be excessively crowded: a system of consolidation that only overcrowded the classrooms. conditions (three or more people per room) and in 22% of these cases there were four or more per room. Two out of three lived with a partner, whether in a nuclear household or with other relatives and non-relatives. The proportion who lived with a partner was 68.7% among those aged 18 and 74.3% among those aged 19. 74% were primiparous pri·mip·a·ra n. pl. pri·mip·a·ras or pri·mip·a·rae 1. A woman who is pregnant for the first time. 2. A woman who has given birth to only one child. . Sixty-five adolescents aged 15-20 participated in focus groups. Three were with adolescent mothers and three with adolescent fathers, and four groups were with adolescents who did not have children (two with girls and two with boys) in three sites (a north-western city, a north-eastern city and in the Greater Buenos Aires Greater Buenos Aires (Spanish: Gran Buenos Aires) is the metropolitan area of the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina, which consists of the Federal Capital and the following 24 partidos (administrative subdivisions) of the Province of Buenos Aires: Findings Adolescent mothers and their partners Contrary to the common belief that teenaged girls who have children experience motherhood alone, vital statistics show that an important proportion of adolescent mothers were living with a partner when they registered their newborns: 42% of those who were 14 or younger, 52% of those aged 15-17 and 71% of those aged 18-19. Census data (2001) also shows that half of teenage mothers were living with their spouse or consensual CONSENSUAL, civil law. This word is applied to designate one species of contract known in the civil laws; these contracts derive their name from the consent of the parties which is required in their formation, as they cannot exist without such consent. 2. partner. Consistently, data from the Survey of Life Conditions (2001) show that 47% of mothers aged 15-19 were married or lived with a partner, 10% were divorced or separated and 44% were single. (15) Our survey data on adolescent partnership stares showed that 41% of young women were already living with their partners at the time of conception, while 55% became pregnant in the context of a dating relationship. By the time the baby was born, 62% were living with a partner, 20% were still dating the father and 10% of relationships had ended. This suggests that pregnancy and birth occur in various partnership contexts, and that pregnancy causes an important number of dating relationships to turn into marital or cohabiting unions. In general, adolescent mothers have children with men of a similar age or a few years older. Only a minority of the adolescents interviewed (5%) said that the father of their child was aged 30 or older. This is similar to data reported in the local literature. (16-18) Pregnancy and schooling Vital information, previously lacking, to address the relationship between pregnancy and school dropout was collected by the survey. It revealed that 44.5% of young mothers were already out of school at the time of their pregnancy (Figure 1), with significant variations between sites, ranging from 28% to 68%. Not attending school at the time of becoming pregnant (which on average occurred at age 16.6) was related to schools' low capacity to encourage students to stay in school (55% of the girls who had dropped out before they got pregnant said they did not want to be in school anymore or had difficulties with studying), economic and accessibility problems (29%) or domestic responsibilities (8%). * In addition, data collected shows that nearly one-third of the adolescents (and half in Tucuman, a very poor north-western province) were neither studying nor working at the time they became pregnant with their first child. This reinforces the idea already proposed by several local authors that, in contexts in which young people have very limited expectations, motherhood is considered a positive experience. (19-21) For instance, Lopez states that motherhood is the principal source of social recognition, self-esteem and respect from family and community for adolescent women living in poor socio-economic conditions. (15) What happened with those who were still attending school when they became pregnant? Six out of ten dropped out during the subsequent months. Feeling ashamed of going to school pregnant and fearing discrimination was the most mentioned reason for dropping out (28%). The second most mentioned reason was not wanting or not liking to study (16%), which could be evidence of poor performance or learning difficulties. In this sense, a study of high school dropout concluded that for adolescents in marginal and vulnerable contexts, pregnancy rarely cuts short a moderately successful educational career and that, in many cases, pregnancy precipitates a decision to quit school that had previously been considered. (22) Other reasons reported included the prescription of bed rest (14%), economic problems (8%) and accessibility problems (7%) such as night school, long distances and bad weather conditions, particularly in the poorest sites. As regards schools' policies, 5% of interviewees said that their school did not admit or expelled pregnant students. On the other hand, four out of ten adolescents who were attending school continued to do so until the end of pregnancy (or at least beyond the seventh month). Focus group discussions showed that in many cases the school appeared to be a flexible environment that, even when lacking the appropriate infrastructure, adapted itself to pregnant adolescents' and young mothers' needs (i.e. small children and babies were allowed into classes and mothers could leave class to breastfeed breast·feed or breast-feed v. breast-fed , breast-feed·ing, breast-feeds v.tr. To feed (a baby) mother's milk from the breast; suckle. v.intr. To breastfeed a baby. ). Some of the girls appreciated their teachers' concern with their health and well-being as well as their child's. [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] This evidence is consistent with data from other countries in the region, (2) and calls into question the stereotyped assumption of an automatic causal relationship between adolescent pregnancy and school dropout. Contraceptive use when conception occurred The majority of survey participants (82%) were not using a contraceptive method at the time they became pregnant, even when they did not necessarily want a child. Among those who were primiparous, * the most mentioned reason for not having used contraception was "wanted to have a baby" (44%), ranging from 30-60% between sites. The proportion who wanted to become pregnant was bigger among girls aged 18-19 years (48%) than among those aged 15-17 (38%). It was 50% among those who were not in school (independently of whether they had finished secondary school or not) compared to 38% among those in school, and higher among those who were living with a partner (58%) than among those not living with a partner (33%). Focus group data indicated that adolescents who intentionally try to get pregnant are usually experiencing particular life circumstances such as feeling lonely after the death of a loved one, having lost a previous pregnancy (either due to a spontaneous miscarriage miscarriage: see abortion. miscarriage or spontaneous abortion Spontaneous expulsion of an embryo or fetus from the uterus before it can live outside the mother. or an induced abortion in·duced abortion n. Abortion caused intentionally by the administration of drugs or by mechanical means. induced abortion ), living with a partner or having been dating during a period of time they considered long enough to start a family. Other main reasons for not having used contraception were poor knowledge (19% thought they could not become pregnant), lack of information on or access to contraceptives (11%), unexpected intercourse (10%) and partners' refusal to use contraception (7%). Gender norms and the ideology of romantic love underlie many of these reasons, as the literature has repeatedly pointed out. (15) Adolescents' reproductive histories as well as official data on the number of adolescents hospitalised due to complications of unsafe abortions Unsafe abortion is a significant cause of maternal mortality and morbidity in the world, especially in developing countries (95% of unsafe abortions take place in developing countries). show that termination of pregnancy termination of pregnancy Induced abortion. See Abortion. is frequent among adolescents. Even though abortion is legally restricted, approximately 5% of survey participants said they had had an abortion, of which 62% were of a first pregnancy, 29% a second one, 8% a third and 1% a fourth pregnancy. Focus group discussions revealed that when girls find out they are pregnant they usually feel ashamed and afraid of their parents' reactions and often attempt to terminate the pregnancy as a way to avoid tension with adults, rather than as a direct rejection of motherhood. Usually these attempts involve ineffectual methods such as hormonal injections bought over the counter or ingestion ingestion /in·ges·tion/ (-chun) the taking of food, drugs, etc., into the body by mouth. in·ges·tion n. 1. The act of taking food and drink into the body by the mouth. 2. of home-made herbal herbal, early botanical book containing descriptions and illustrations of herbs and plants with their properties, chiefly those qualities that made them useful as medicines or condiments. Most of the herbals were written between c.1470 and c. preparations. Antenatal care Nearly 4% of teens surveyed did not have a medical check-up at all during pregnancy, and an additional 3% had only one. The most frequent reason mentioned (40%) was that they lacked access to health care services (i.e. long distances, did not have money to pay for transportation, did not have time), followed by not considering it important or not wanting to receive medical care during pregnancy (26%). The majority (69%) had at least five checkups, which is the number promoted by the Ministry of Health, though a 2003 WHO document recommends that four check-ups are enough. (23,24) Primiparous young women were more likely to have an adequate number of check-ups (75%) than multiparous mul·tip·a·rous adj. 1. Relating to a multipara. 2. Giving birth to more than one offspring at a time. women (52%). Education played a significant role in having an adequate number of check-ups. Other variables such as poverty status, school attendance and having used contraception quite consistently were also significant predictors of adequate antenatal care mainly among primiparous mothers. Multivariate analysis multivariate analysis, n a statistical approach used to evaluate multiple variables. multivariate analysis, n a set of techniques used when variation in several variables has to be studied simultaneously. found that among primiparous young mothers, educational level and poverty level had an independent effect on antenatal care.* At each educational level, adolescents living in the poorest households were less likely to have five or more antenatal check-ups. Furthermore, those who were going to school at the time they got pregnant were 34% more likely to have an adequate number of antenatal visits than those who had already left school. Reproductive history and the context in which pregnancy occurs also influenced attitudes towards antenatal care, with those who reported having used contraception from first sexual intercourse sexual intercourse or coitus or copulation Act in which the male reproductive organ enters the female reproductive tract (see reproductive system). , those who wanted to have a baby, and those who were in a dating or cohabiting relationship at the time they got pregnant having a higher probability of having had an adequate number of antenatal check-ups. Regarding the timing of antenatal check-ups, 56% started in the first trimester Noun 1. first trimester - time period extending from the first day of the last menstrual period through 12 weeks of gestation trimester - a period of three months; especially one of the three three-month periods into which human pregnancy is divided and 37% in the second trimester Noun 1. second trimester - time period extending from the 13th to the 27th week of gestation trimester - a period of three months; especially one of the three three-month periods into which human pregnancy is divided . Early antenatal care was higher for primiparous (60%) than multiparous girls (46%). Focus group discussions suggested that mixed feelings about whether or not to continue the pregnancy, fear of disclosing their status and self-induced attempts to terminate the pregnancy may explain the delay in initiation of antenatal check-ups. Girls usually attended antenatal care in the company of significant others (75%), the majority (61%) with their partners. Focus group discussions with young fathers indicated that they were interested and willing to attend as a way of showing concern for their partners and babies, and also to clarify doubts and get first-hand information about the progress of the pregnancy. Some young men expressed gratitude towards health professionals who encouraged their participation, since this allowed them to some extent to feel "protagonists" in the process as well. Those who had not been able to attend check-ups due to their working hours expressed regret. Also, young fathers who had been unable to be with their partners during delivery or at night due to hospital regulations expressed feelings of frustration and anger. This strong will to be present during pregnancy and delivery should not be taken as indicative of active participation during childrearing, however. With respect to characteristics and quality of antenatal check-ups, nearly all young mothers reported having received routine screening, such as blood pressure, weight, stomach measure, listening to baby's heart, ultrasound and tetanus tetanus (tĕt`nəs, –ənəs) or lockjaw, acute infectious disease of the central nervous system caused by the toxins of Clostridium tetani. shot. 70% said they were tested for HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. . Only one out of three received information about breastfeeding and contraceptive counselling, and only 8% attended a birth preparation course. The vast majority reported there were no such courses offered in public sector facilities, or they lacked such information (63%). In the immediate post-partum period, 58% of teen mothers received information on breastfeeding, 54% were advised how to take care of the baby (i.e. bathing, cleaning the umbilical cord umbilical cord (ŭmbĭl`ĭkəl), cordlike structure about 22 in. (56 cm) long in the pregnant human female, extending from the abdominal wall of the fetus to the placenta. ), but only 30% received information on family planning family planning Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources. . This last figure is extremely low when compared to the fact that nine out of ten interviewees reported they were willing to use contraception in the near future, and wanted to space their next pregnancy by at least two years. The preferred contraceptive methods were oral contraceptives Oral Contraceptives Definition Oral contraceptives are medicines taken by mouth to help prevent pregnancy. They are also known as the Pill, OCs, or birth control pills. (45%), IUD IUD Definition An IUD is an intrauterine device made of plastic and/or copper that is inserted into the womb (uterus) by way of the vaginal canal. One type releases a hormone (progesterone), and is replaced each year. (36%), injectable in·ject·a·ble adj. Capable of being injected. Used of a drug. n. A drug or medicine that can be injected. contraceptives (9%) and condoms (7%). Although the condom 1. condom - The protective plastic bag that accompanies 3.5-inch microfloppy diskettes. Rarely, also used of (paper) disk envelopes. Unlike the write protect tab, the condom (when left on) not only impedes the practice of SEX but has also been shown to have a high failure had been the most commonly used method among them before the pregnancy, an effective female-controlled contraceptive method had become their priority. Yet physicians in public hospitals were often reluctant to provide an IUD to adolescent mothers, believing it to be risky if they do not return in case of complications and also because it discourages the use of condoms to prevent STIs/HIV. Discussion and recommendations The data generated by this study enabled us to see whether and for whom adolescent pregnancy among 15-19 year-old girls was a problem and what type of problem. We found that 40-70% of adolescent mothers in our study would have preferred to postpone pregnancy. Unwanted pregnancy unwanted pregnancy Obstetrics A pregnancy that is not desired by one or both biologic parents. See Teen pregnancy. entails the risk of unsafe abortion, which causes maternal morbidity and mortality Morbidity and Mortality can refer to:
* Preventing adolescent pregnancy Our findings are consistent with those of other research showing that social and economic disadvantage plays a powerful role in teenage pregnancy teenage pregnancy Adolescent pregnancy, teen pregnancy Social medicine Pregnancy by a ♀, age 13 to 19; TP is usually understood to occur in a ♀ who has not completed her core education–secondary school, has few or no marketable skills, is and childbearing child·bear·ing n. Pregnancy and parturition. child bear ing adj. . (11) Thus, socio-economic policies aimed at
the social inclusion of adolescents from underprivileged groups are
crucial, particularly in a country in which, at the moment we conducted
the study, 63% of children aged 0-13 and 58% of those aged 14-22 were
living in poverty. (25)
Better economic and social conditions would allow teenagers to remain in school and to envisage en·vis·age tr.v. en·vis·aged, en·vis·ag·ing, en·vis·ag·es 1. To conceive an image or a picture of, especially as a future possibility: envisaged a world at peace. 2. opportunities for employment and personal development other than having children. Keeping adolescents in school is key to their well-being and to prevent unwanted pregnancies. As shown above, longer schooling is clearly associated with the adoption of contraception at sexual initiation and attending antenatal care. It seems that contact with teachers, peers and authorities and the expectation that educational credentials may help them find a job or be better prepared to face adult life encourages "protective behaviours". (22) Our findings indicate that the response of schools to pregnant adolescents and mothers tend to depend to a large extent on individual initiative and commitment on the part of teachers and heads of schools. Thus, the Ministry of Education needs to issue guidelines guidelines, n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks. to require all schools to fulfil the rights guaranteed to pregnant students and mothers by existing national laws (National Laws 25.808 and 25.273). Even in the optimist scenario of an improvement of people's living conditions living conditions npl → condiciones fpl de vida living conditions npl → conditions fpl de vie living conditions living and opportunities, some of the public policy deficits identified will not automatically be redressed. Some specific interventions need to be implemented or reinforced and expanded. As the literature has consistently shown, our findings indicate that adolescents find it difficult to practise prac·tise v. & n. Chiefly British Variant of practice. prac tis·er n. safer sex due to gender
images, roles and power relations, the "ideology of romantic
love" and persistent myths regarding contraception. (26,27) Thus,
it is imperative to implement sexuality education at schools and
communities. The recently approved National Law 26.150/2006, which makes
sexuality education mandatory at all school levels, provides a window of
opportunity to address a pending and highly controversial issue in
Argentina.
One important experience from other countries in the region for Argentina to learn from is that behaviour change, condom use and safer sex should be part of programmes in deprived communities rather than exclusively school-based education. (26) Emphasis on community-level work is particularly appropriate for contexts where a high proportion of adolescents are not in the educational system. The local diagnoses we conducted (data from this study, not shown here) indicate that it is necessary to train sex educators from a gender and rights perspective and using participatory approaches. Gender equity and gender and sexual violence are some of the key topics that need to be addressed by adolescents, parents and community leaders. * Improving quality of maternity care and post-abortion care In order to improve the coverage of antenatal care, it is important to carry out public information campaigns promoting antenatal check-ups and facilitate access to health care centres in terms of improved clinic hours and ease of getting appointments. Local health care units and community leaders need to target multiparous young women with a low educational level, since they are the group with the lowest antenatal care coverage. Another aspect for improving quality of obstetric ob·stet·ric or ob·stet·ri·cal adj. Of or relating to the profession of obstetrics or the care of women during and after pregnancy. obstetrical, obstetric pertaining to or emanating from obstetrics. care that any strategy must address is the lack of birthing classes. Our focus groups indicated that delivery and post-partum are times when men's presence is forbidden or not encouraged and their desire for involvement underestimated. It is essential that institutions reconsider the way they are excluding young fathers. Contraceptive and breastfeeding counselling need to be included as routine practices during antenatal care, in order to improve quality of care. Follow-up of young women after delivery or post-abortion also clearly needs to be improved. Postpartum postpartum /post·par·tum/ (post-pahr´tum) occurring after childbirth, with reference to the mother. post·par·tum adj. Of or occurring in the period shortly after childbirth. care and healthy child visits can be good opportunities to offer contraceptive information and methods to young mothers. Given the willingness we found to space pregnancies and the wish to have only a small number of children, a wide range of methods should be available. The prevailing guidance discouraging IUD provision to adolescents must be reviewed, especially for those with previous failures with male-controlled and hormonal methods (data from this study, not shown here). Regarding post-abortion care, it is important to improve interpersonal relations between health care providers and patients in view of the prejudices and stigma stigma: see pistil. Stigma mark of Cain God’s mark on Cain, a sign of his shame for fratricide. [O. T.: Genesis 4:15] scarlet letter elicited in interviews with some health care providers (data from this study, not shown here). The context for such interventions is favourable since the Ministry of Health is committed to improving post-abortion quality of care (i.e. carrying out training in manual vacuum aspiration vacuum aspiration n. A method of abortion performed during the first trimester, in which the contents of the uterus are withdrawn through a narrow tube. Also called suction curettage, vacuum curettage. ). Contraceptive counselling should be offered as a routine practice to women hospitalised due to abortion complications. More globally, it is necessary to support initiatives to make abortion legal since that would contribute to reduced morbidity and mortality from unsafe abortions. As with sex educators, health professionals need to be sensitised to a gender and rights perspective. In particular, it is important that they show a greater understanding of the difficulties that consistent and correct use of contraception entails and thus, be more willing to offer emergency contraception Emergency Contraception Definition Emergency contraception or emergency birth control uses either emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs) or a Copper-T intrauterine device (IUD) to help prevent pregnancy following unprotected vaginal intercourse. and IUDs. In conclusion, even though the implementation of sexuality education and the provision of contraceptive methods to adolescents still face political, ideological, institutional and cultural resistance, the current scenario is favourable for the enhancement of adolescents' sexual and reproductive health and rights. We hope that the research data produced by this study and the recommendations it has inspired may contribute to the development of more humane and appropriate interventions that take into account adolescents' perspectives, needs and desires. Acknowledgements This paper is based on research published in the book Embarazo y maternidad en la adolescencia. Estereotipos, evidencias y propuestas para politicas publicas. The research was funded by the National Ministry of Health and Environment of Argentina and UNICEF UNICEF (y `nĭsĕf'), the United Nations Children's Fund, an affiliated agency of the United Nations. Argentina. We
thank Dr O' Donnell, former Director, National Research Commission
for Health Research, and Eleonor Faur, former UNICEF officer, for their
commitment to the project and the dissemination dissemination Medtalk The spread of a pernicious process–eg, CA, acute infection Oncology Metastasis, see there of research results at
the national level. We acknowledge the research contributions of Ariel
Adaszko, Valeria Alonso and Fabian Portnoy and of Edith Pantelides to
the demographic analysis Demographic analysis uses administrative records to develop an independent estimate of the population [1]. Demographic analysis estimates are often considered a reliable standard for judging the accuracy of the census information gathered at any time. . Fieldwork field·work n. 1. A temporary military fortification erected in the field. 2. Work done or firsthand observations made in the field as opposed to that done or observed in a controlled environment. 3. was carried out by local scholars: Lidia Mobilio (Chaco), Silvia Nudelman and Raul Claramunt (Misiones), Mara Duhart (Catamarca), Paola Andreatta and Marta Arrascaeta (Buenos Aires), Evelina Chapman (Tucuman), Silvia Yoeca de Sabio (Salta) and Fernanda Candio (Rosario). We are grateful to the midwives who administered the sunder sun·der v. sun·dered, sun·der·ing, sun·ders v.tr. To break or wrench apart; sever. See Synonyms at separate. v.intr. To break into parts. n. A division or separation. with efficiency and sensitivity. References (1.) Stern C, Garcia E. Hacia un nuevo enfoque en el campo cam·po n. pl. cam·pos A large grassy plain in South America, with scattered bushes and small trees. [Spanish, field, from Latin campus.] del embarazo adolescente. In: Stem C, Figueroa JG, editors. Sexualidad y Salud Reproductiva. Avances y Retos para la lnvestigacion. Mexico DF: El Colegio El Colegio is a municipality and town of Colombia in the department of Cundinamarca. • • [ de Mexico, 2001. p.331-58. (2.) Pantelides E. Aspectos sociales del embarazo y la fecundidad adolescente en America Latina. In: CELADE-Universite Paris X Nanterre. La Fecundidad en America Latina y el Caribe: [??]Transicion o Revolucion? Santiago de Chile: CELADE-UPX, 2004. p.167-82. (3.) Heilborn ML, Aquino E, Knauth D. Editorial. Cadernos de Saude Publica 2006;22(7):1362. (4.) Binstock G, Pantelides E. La fecundidad adolescente hoy: diagnostico sociodemografico. In: Gogna M, coordinator. Emharazo y Maternidad en la Adolescencia. Estereotipos, Evidencias y Propuestas para Politicas Publicas. Buenos Aires: Cedes-UNICEF-Ministerio de Salud de la Nacion, 2005. p.77-112. (5.) Gogna M, Zamberlin N. Sexual and reproductive health in Argentina. Public policy transitions in a context of crisis. Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies Latin American Studies (sometimes abbreviated LAS) is an academic discipline which studies the history and experience of peoples and cultures in the Americas. Definition 2004;10(2):95-105. (6.) Lawlor D, Shaw M. Too much too young? Teenage pregnancy is not a public health problem. International Journal of Epidemiology 2002;31(3):552-54. (7.) Scally This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details. This article has been tagged since September 2007. G. Too much too young? Teenage pregnancy is a public health, not a clinical problem. International Journal of Epidemiology 2002;31(3):554-55. (8.) Rich-Edwards J. Teen pregnancy is not a public health crisis in the United States. It is time we made it one. International Journal of Epidemiology 2002;31(3):555-56. (9.) Smith S. Too much too young? In Nepal more a case of too little, too young. International Journal of Epidemiology 2002;31(3):557-58. (10.) Roman Perez R, Vazquez Pizana E, Rojo Quinones G, et al. Riesgos biologicos del embarazo adolescente: una paradoja social y biologica. In: Stern C, Garcia E, coordinators. Sexualidad y Salud Reproductiva de Adolescentes en Mexico. Aportaciones para la Investigacion y la Accion. Documentos de Trabajo 6. Mexico DF: El Colegio de Mexico, 2001. p.33-58. (11.) Luker K. Dubious Conceptions. The Politics of Teenage Pregnancy. Cambridge: Harvard University Press The Harvard University Press is a publishing house, a division of Harvard University, that is highly respected in academic publishing. It was established on January 13, 1913. In 2005, it published 220 new titles. , 1996. (12.) Brandao ER, Heilborn ML. Sexualidade e gravidez na adolescencia entre jovens de camadas medias do Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r , Brasil.
Cadernos de Saude Publica 2006;22(7): 1421-30.
(13.) Weller S Wel·ler , Thomas Huckle Born 1915. American microbiologist. He shared a 1954 Nobel Prize for work on the cultivation of the polio virus. . Salud reproductiva de los/las adolescentes. Argentina, 1990-1998. In: Oliveira MC (organiser). Cultura, Adolescencia, Saude: Argentina, Brasil, Mexico. Campinas: Cedes-Colmex-Nepo/Unicamp, 1999. p.9-43. (14.) Villa A. Identidades masculinas y comportamientos reproductivos entre varones de los sectores populares pobres de Buenos Aires. In: Figueroa JG, Nava R, editors. Memorias del Seminario-Taller Identidad Masculina, Sexualidad y Salud Reproductiva. Mexico DF: El Colegio de Mexico, 2001. p.27-31. (15.) Lopez E. La fecundidad adolescente en la Argentina Antonia Mercé y Luque, known by her stage name as La Argentina, was a flamenco dancer. She was born on September 4, 1890 in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and died on July 18, 1936 in Bayonne, France. : desigualdades y desafios. UBA UBA Universidad de Buenos Aires (Argentina) UBA Umweltbundesamt (German: Federal Environment Agency) UBA Ubiquitin-Associated UBA Urstadt Biddle Properties Inc UBA Urstadt Biddle Properties Inc. : Encrucijadas, Revista de la Universidad de Buenos Aires 2006;39:24-31. (16.) Pantelides E. La Maternidad Precoz: la fecundidad Adolescente en la Argentina. Buenos Aires: UNICEF, 1995. (17.) Ananos MC. Composicion y comportamientos de union en madres adolescentes. Rosario 1980-1991. Cedes-Cenep, Taller de Investigaciones Sociales en Salud Reproductiva y Sexualidad. Buenos Aires: Cedes-Cenep, 1993. (18.) Geldstein RN, Pantelides EA. Double subordination, double risk: class, gender and sexuality in adolescent women in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters 1997;5(9): 121-31. (19.) Adaszko A. Perspectivas socio-antropologicas sobre la adolescencia, la juventud y el embarazo. In: Gogna M, coordinator. Embarazo y Materuidad en la Adolescencia. Estereotipos, Evidencias y Propuestas para Politicas Publicas. Buenos Aires: Cedes-UNICEF-Ministerio de Salud de la Nacion, 2005. p.33-66. (20.) Zamberlin N. Percepciones y conductas de las/los adolescentes frente al embarazo y la maternidad/paternidad. In: Gogna M, coordinator. Embarazo y Maternidad en la Adolescencia. Estereotipos, Evidencias y Propuestas para Politicas Publicas. Buenos Aires: CEDES-UNICEF-Ministerio de Salud de la Nacion, 2005. p.285-316. (21.) Geldstein RN, Pantelides EA. Riesgo Reproductivo en [a Adolescencia. Desigualdad Social y Asimetria de Genero. Buenos Aires: UNICEF, 2001 At: <www.unicef.org/argentina/ spanish/ar_insumos_ Riesgoreproductivoadolescencia. pdf>. (22.) Binstock G, Cerrutti M. Carreras Truncadas. El Abandono Escolar en el Nivel Medio en la Argentina. Buenos Aires: UNICEF, 2005. (23.) Ministerio de Salud de la Nacion. El Cuidado Prenatal prenatal /pre·na·tal/ (-na´tal) preceding birth. pre·na·tal adj. Preceding birth. Also called antenatal. prenatal preceding birth. . Guia para la Practica del Cuidado Preconcepcional y del Control Prenatal. Buenos Aires: Ministerio de Salud de la Nacion, 2001. (24.) 0rganizacion Mundial de la Salud. Ensayo Clinico Aleatorizado de Control Prenatal de la OMS OMS - Opportunity Management System : Manual para la Puesta en Practica del Nuevo Modelo de Control Prenatal. Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva. : WHO, 2003. (25.) Instituto Nacional de Estadisticas y Censos. Permanent Household Survey. 2003, second semestre. At: <www.indec.gov.ar>. (26.) Paiva V. Gendered scripts and the sexual scene: promoting sexual subjects among Brazilian teenagers. In: Parker R, Barbosa RM, Aggleton P, editors. Framing the Sexual Subject. The Politics of Gender, Sexuality and Power. California: University of California Press "UC Press" redirects here, but this is also an abbreviation for University of Chicago Press University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing. , 2000. p.216-39. (27.) Heilborn ML, Aquino EML EML - Extended ML. A language for formally specifying SML programs. ["Formal Program Development in Extended ML for the Working Programmer", D. Sannella, Proc 3rd BCS/FACS Workshop on Refinement", Springer 1990]. , Bozon M, et al, organizers. O Aprendizado da Sexualidade: Reproducao e Trajetorias Sociais de Jovens Brasileiros. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Garamond/ Editora Fiocruz, 2006. * The remaining 8% corresponds to other reasons or without data. * For ethical and methodological reasons we did not ask directly "Was this a wanted pregnancy?". Instead, we asked if they were using contraception or not at the moment they got pregnant with this baby and why. Indirectly, this gave us information on whether--at the time of conception--these pregnancies had been wanted or not. These data were collected only for primiparous women. Multiparous had their first pregnancies at least two years before and we wanted to avoid biases caused by the time gap or the experience of motherhood. * We are referring to multivariate The use of multiple variables in a forecasting model. logistic regression In statistics, logistic regression is a regression model for binomially distributed response/dependent variables. It is useful for modeling the probability of an event occurring as a function of other factors. models that predict the odds of having at least five check-ups during pregnancy separately for primiparous and multiparous mothers. Other control variables included place of residence, private or social security health care coverage and age at sexual initiation (which was not statistically significant). Monica Gogna, (a) Georgina Binstock, (b) Silvia Fernandez, (c) Ines Ibarlucia, (c) Nina Zamberlin (c) (a) Researcher, Center for the Study of State and Society (CEDES), and National Research Council, Buenos Aires, Argentina. E-mail: rnonicag@cedes.org (b) Researcher, Center of Population Studies (CENEP CENEP Centro de Estudios de Población ), and National Research Council, Buenos Aires, Argentina (c) Researcher, CEDES, Buenos Aires, Argentina |
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