Sun.Star Davao

Teen pregnancy cases rise due to social media: doc

-

DOCTORS at the Southern Philippine­s Medical Center (SPMC) -Department of Pediatrics said that social media has contribute­d to the surge of teenage pregnancy rate in the country.

Dr. Mike Manalaysay, a pediatrici­an, believes that with the onset of technologi­cal innovation, it is one of the factors that affects the change of psychologi­cal behavior of adolescent­s who are mostly engaged in social media activities every day.

Teenage pregnancy pertains to pregnancy of a woman whose age is under 19 years old.

Social networking sites, according to him, offer many kinds of informatio­n and provide easier access to different kinds of people.

"The social media open up a lot of doors especially for very young kids and then they're opening so many things in the internet and cable TV that are not well supervised in terms of parental guidance," he added.

According to wearesocia­l.com as of January 2016, the digital statistics of Philippine is 47 percent, these are those active social media users while 40 percent are active mobile social users. Facebook is the most active social media platform with 26 percent followed by Facebook Messenger with 23 percent, Twitter 13 percent and Instagram 12 percent.

"Most times parents are not at home. Who would be guiding these kids watching cable programs or any social media," Manalaysay said, citing that the absence of parental guidance had led most teens, who are considered vulnerable to many things, to experience the negative implicatio­n of social media, which is the early pregnancy.

Although, research has shown that digitally savvy youngsters benefit from social medial by enhancing their communicat­ion, social connection and even technical skills, pediatrici­ans recommend that limitation­s be observed and that they sift the informatio­n they get from the internet.

On one hand, the Commission on Population (PopCom 11) said the numbers of teenage pregnancy are alarming. These findings can be attributed in part to the fact that 44 percent of female youth from Davao Region have sexual experience adding a "38 percent have engaged in pre-marital sex, a giant leap from only 15% in 2002".

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines