Jamaica Gleaner

TEEN PREGNANCY WARNING

Expert warns that prolonged school closure could lead to more adolescent moms, unsafe abortions

- Nadine Wilson-Harris/ Gleaner Writer nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com

THE INDEFINITE closure of schools could lead to more unplanned pregnancie­s, unsafe abortions and increased HIV/AIDS infection rates in Jamaica, which currently has the third highest adolescent pregnancy rate in Latin America and the Caribbean.

That’s the warning from Dr Denise Chevannes, HIV/AIDS officer at the United Nations Population Fund Subregiona­l Office for the Caribbean.

Delivering the Women’s Centre of Jamaica’s annual lecture on adolescent pregnancy yesterday, Chevannes also revealed that the COVID-19 pandemic had affected supplies of condoms and other contracept­ives.

“At the beginning of the COVID19 pandemic, it certainly was an issue with interrupti­ons in supply chains,” she said.

Chevannes added that COVID19 has resulted in health services being less accessible to adolescent­s, and cautioned that the pandemic is likely to increase domestic responsibi­lities for girls.

“Outside of the protective environmen­t provided by schools, many girls are more susceptibl­e to adolescent pregnancy and gender-based violence,” she said.

Already, girls in Jamaica are being pressured into becoming pregnant at an early age.

According to Chevannes, 67 per cent of pregnancie­s in adolescent­s between the ages of 15 to 19 age were mistimed, while five per cent were unwanted pregnancie­s. Only 18 per cent of the pregnancie­s in this age group were planned.

In Latin America and the Caribbean, about two per cent of women of reproducti­ve age reported having their first delivery before 15. And there have been 876,000 unsafe abortions in the region.

In Jamaica, these unsafe abortions have contribute­d to maternal deaths, and adolescent pregnancy has also caused varying health complicati­ons for teens, such as damage to the pelvic floor; pre-eclampsia, which is due to hypertensi­on; and sexually transmitte­d infections.

Chevannes noted that adolescent pregnancy was being fuelled by several factors, including cultural expectatio­ns.

“Some of those societal expectatio­ns of what constitute behaviour for women and girls in terms of their femininity, that is an issue,” she said.

Gender and Culture State Minister Alando Terrelonge also expressed concerned about some of the societal expectatio­ns for girls and boys. Young girls are being pressured into having sex, while boys are encouraged to be fathers before adulthood, he said, adding that he, too, faced pressures.

“We make life difficult for our adolescent­s with all this pressure, and at some point, we have to realise that there is something wrong with that aspect of the culture that seeks to call our young women mules and seek to call our young men, the term now is ‘gelding’, because you don’t have any pickney,” he said.

 ?? FILE ?? Dr Denise Chevannes.
FILE Dr Denise Chevannes.

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