390 likes | 585 Views
Kids Having Kids-- What’s Up With Teen Pregnancy?. By Marva Johnston RNCNP. Teen Pregnancy--The Problem. Teen Pregnancy--The Problem. Over 1 million adolescents under 19 years old get pregnant each year 40% of these pregnancies are to girls under age 17 85-90% are unintended
E N D
Kids Having Kids-- What’s Up With Teen Pregnancy? By Marva Johnston RNCNP
Teen Pregnancy--The Problem • Over 1 million adolescents under 19 years old get pregnant each year • 40% of these pregnancies are to girls under age 17 • 85-90% are unintended • 4 in 10 teenage girls get pregnant at least once before age 20 • Each hour 100 teens get pregnant and 55 give birth
Teen Pregnancy--The Problem • U.S. teenagers have the highest rates of pregnancy, childbearing and abortion among developed countries • U.S. rates are nearly double Great Britain’s, 4 times those of France and Germany and more than 10 times that of Japan
Teen Pregnancy In New Mexico • New Mexico ranks 5th in the US in teen pregnancy rates • In 1996 teens in New Mexico gave birth to 4851 babies • One third of all New Mexico families begin while the mother is a teen • Quay county ranks 6th in New Mexico in teen birth rates (2000)
Sexually Transmitted Infections • May have had multiple partners before pregnancy • May change partners during pregnancy • Low use of barrier methods
Health Consequences to Baby • High rate of low birth weight results in: • infant death • blindness • deafness • chronic respiratory problems • mental retardation • cerebral palsy
Health Consequences to Baby • Low birth weight doubles the chances that the child will later be diagnosed with: • Dyslexia • ADHD • Other disability
Social Consequences of Teen Pregnancy • Teen mothers are: • Less likely to complete school • Less than 1/3 of teens who begin families before age 18 ever earn a high school degree • 2/3 of families began by young unmarried women are poor • 1/2 of all teen mothers and 3/4 of all unmarried teen mothers begin receiving welfare within 5 years of the birth of the child
Social Consequences of Teen Pregnancy • 80% of fathers do NOT marry the mother • They pay low rates of child support--under $800 per year
Social Consequences of Teen Pregnancy • Children who live apart from their fathers are: • 5 times more likely to be poor • twice as likely to drop out of school • Twice as likely to abuse alcohol and drugs • Twice as likely to end up in jail • 4 times more likely to need help for emotional or behavioral problems
Childhood Consequences • Children of teen parents usually get inadequate health care • Average 3.8 visits per year to medical provider as opposed to 4.3 visits for children of parents 20-24 yrs old
Childhood Consequences • Children of teen parents usually live in poverty
Childhood Consequences Percent below poverty
Childhood Consequences • Inadequate parenting • Unable to provide optimal learning environment • High rates of abuse/neglect • Poor school performance • Lower test scores • Less likely to graduate
Inadequate Parenting Consequences • Sons of teenage mothers are 13% more likely to end up in prison
Inadequate Parenting Consequences • Daughters of teen mothers are 22% more likely to end up as teen mothers themselves
Cost of Teen Pregnancy • $40 Billion in welfare to teen mothers • $7 Billion in direct healthcare costs
Things That Work—The Teens’ Part • Involvement in school and community • Developing positive self esteem • Dedication to better school performance • Involvement in extracurricular activities—sports,music,etc.
Things That Work—The Family’s Part • Positive adult role models • Participation in youth’s education • Appropriate and consistent discipline • Goal setting • Increased and improved communication about sexuality • More family activities
Things That Work—The Community’s Part • Increased opportunities for youth • Parent and teen support groups • School based health centers • Sexuality education at younger ages • Easy access to contraceptive services • Address need of families in poverty • Counseling services
Things That Work—The Community’s Part • Life skills education • Support of the entire community in the efforts to prevent teen pregnancy • All children have equal access and opportunities in education, extracurricular activities, employment
Things That Work—Our Part • Be involved • Be accessible • Be supportive • Educate, educate, educate