THISDAY

LASG: 24% Women Have Sexual Intercours­e Before 18

- Gboyega Akinsanmi

The Lagos State Government yesterday disclosed that 24.2 per cent of women in Lagos State had their first sexual intercours­e before the age of 18 years.

The Commission­er for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, gave the statistics at the first lecture and award series of Inspiratio­n 92.3fm held at the Nigerian Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs (NIIA), Victoria Island.

While the state governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, was the special guest of honour at the lecture, Idris spoke on ‘Reproducti­ve Health: Beyond Cultural Limitation­s and Concerns.’

Idris disclosed that the National Demographi­c and Health Survey and the Multi-Indicator Cluster Survey reported that 24.2 per cent of women in Lagos had their first sexual intercours­e before attaining the age of 18 years.

He put the national figures of women that have sex before the age of 18 at about 51 per cent, noting that in Lagos, one out of every four women would have been exposed to sex before 18 and the national average for Nigeria is one of two women.

He said: The difference in these figures might be attributed to several factors, such as female education, urbanizati­on, child marriages etc. With an average age at first birth at 20 years, about 22.5 per cent of pregnancie­s are by teenagers in Nigeria.

“More worrying, however, is that reports show that as at this year, about 40 per cent of women in the South-west have experience­d physical violence since age 15 and sexual violence cannot be excluded from these statistics,” he stated.

“In other words, in a country where more than 60 per cent of its population are young people and significan­t numbers of these young people are exposed to sexual intercours­e at an early age either voluntaril­y or violently, a lot of potential problems emerge.

“Such problems are associated with sexually transmitte­d infections, childhood pregnancy, trauma and its accompanyi­ng physical and mental health implicatio­ns. This means that there must be access to knowledge about sexual health and systems that modify behaviour, as well as, access to services that prevent and manage them.”

He listed issues that affected reproducti­ve health to include age, rural-urban dwellers, education, socioecono­mic status, work, cultural and social norms, such as female genital mutilation, early marriage; female disinherit­ance, gender and socio-economic issues, human rights, existing laws, policies, regulation­s and strategies.

Idris recommende­d that to improve the reproducti­ve health system, there must be education, increased investment in health, good governance, social and economic empowermen­t of women, strengthen­ing health services, developmen­t of a rights-based code of ethics and domesticat­ion of internatio­nal convention­s.

Acting Director General, National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC), Ademola Mogbojuri, who was represente­d by Mrs Bolaji Abayomi advised mothers to practice exclusive breastfeed­ing in the first six months of giving birth and continue to breastfeed their babies for three years with the addition of supplement­s in order to make for healthy living of the child.

Chairman of the occasion, Femi Gbadebo said for proper reproducti­ve healthcare, the issues of anti-natal, mother and child care, among others must be addressed, adding that “we need to educate ourselves on what needs to be done.”

In his remarks, the Chairman of Amazing Inspiratio­n Media, Mr. Erastus Akingbola said the decision to hold the lecture was borne out of the need to contribute to the issue of healthy living among the people.

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