Awareness of the dangers of teenage pregnancy and motherhood among teenage mothers
Table Of Contents
Chapter ONE
INTRODUCTION
- 1.1Introduction
- 1.2Background of Study
- 1.3Problem Statement
- 1.4Objective of Study
- 1.5Limitation of Study
- 1.6Scope of Study
- 1.7Significance of Study
- 1.8Structure of the Research
- 1.9Definition of Terms
Chapter TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
- 2.1Overview of Teenage Pregnancy
- 2.2Causes of Teenage Pregnancy
- 2.3Effects of Teenage Pregnancy
- 2.4Prevention and Intervention Programs
- 2.5Psychological Impact on Teenage Mothers
- 2.6Social Stigma and Teenage Pregnancy
- 2.7Educational Attainment of Teenage Mothers
- 2.8Economic Consequences
- 2.9Cultural Perspectives on Teenage Pregnancy
- 2.10Global Comparison of Teenage Pregnancy Rates
Chapter THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
- 3.1Research Design
- 3.2Population and Sample
- 3.3Data Collection Methods
- 3.4Data Analysis Techniques
- 3.5Ethical Considerations
- 3.6Research Limitations
- 3.7Research Validity and Reliability
- 3.8Research Framework
Chapter FOUR
DATA PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS
- 4.1Overview of Findings
- 4.2Demographic Analysis
- 4.3Factors Contributing to Teenage Pregnancy
- 4.4Impact on Educational Goals
- 4.5Support Systems for Teenage Mothers
- 4.6Health Outcomes for Teenage Mothers
- 4.7Societal Attitudes towards Teenage Pregnancy
- 4.8Policy Implications
Chapter FIVE
SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- 5.1Summary of Findings
- 5.2Conclusions
- 5.3Recommendations
Thesis Abstract
Abstract
Teenage pregnancy and motherhood continue to be significant public health concerns globally, with adverse implications for both the teenage mothers and their children. This study aimed to explore the awareness of the dangers of teenage pregnancy and motherhood among teenage mothers. A qualitative research design was employed, utilizing semi-structured interviews with teenage mothers who had experienced pregnancy and motherhood during their adolescent years. The participants were selected through purposive sampling from diverse socio-economic backgrounds to capture a range of perspectives. The findings revealed a mixed level of awareness among teenage mothers regarding the dangers associated with teenage pregnancy and early motherhood. While some participants demonstrated a good understanding of the risks and challenges involved, others exhibited limited awareness, particularly regarding the long-term consequences on their educational and career prospects. Factors influencing awareness included education level, access to information, family support, and personal experiences. Several teenage mothers highlighted the physical and emotional challenges they faced during pregnancy and early motherhood, emphasizing the need for comprehensive sex education and access to reproductive health services. The participants expressed regret over their lack of knowledge about contraception and the potential consequences of engaging in unprotected sexual activity. Furthermore, societal stigma and lack of support were identified as barriers to seeking help and information about reproductive health. Overall, the study underscores the importance of promoting awareness about the dangers of teenage pregnancy and motherhood among adolescents through targeted interventions. Comprehensive sexuality education programs should be implemented in schools and communities to equip teenagers with the necessary knowledge and skills to make informed decisions about their sexual and reproductive health. Additionally, healthcare providers and social services must ensure accessible and youth-friendly services for pregnant teenagers to receive appropriate support and guidance. In conclusion, enhancing awareness of the risks associated with teenage pregnancy and motherhood is crucial in empowering teenage mothers to break the cycle of early childbearing and achieve their full potential. By addressing the gaps in knowledge and support systems, society can better protect the well-being of teenage mothers and prevent future incidences of teenage pregnancies.
Thesis Overview
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</p><p>INTRODUCTION</p><p>The number of teenagers giving birth each year in Nigeria is increasing. Babies are seen dumped in toilet places, bushes and road sides. These babies who are dumped are in most cases, given birth to by teenagers who are unwed. Some of these teenage mothers cannot identify the fathers of their babies because they have multiple sex partners so they feel the best option is to dump such babies.</p><p>Some teenage girls become mothers, because they cannot meet some life goals. Being a teenage mother is not accidental for some girls but intentional. This is because such girls see no better option in life other than being a mother. That is the reason most current sex and pregnancy preventive education efforts are ineffective at preventing teenage motherhood. There is a public concern over the rate at which the number of teenage mothers is increasing. The resolution to become a teenage mother by these young girls has triggered both political debate and academic inquiry.</p><p>Teen childbearing is associated with negative outcomes for teen parents, their children, and society. The vast majority of all pregnancies among teenagers are unintended that-is, they were either unwanted or they occurred outside marriage (Ohonsi 2010). Teen birth rate in Katsina is the highest when compared to those of other states including Oyo and Edo. (Ogbu 2013).These teenage mothers face a variety of difficult decisions. For the unmarried ones, they must decide whether to raise the born child or to place the baby for adoption. For the married ones, they must make decision with their husbands about mode of delivery, are they going for normal delivery, cesarean section or go for an abortion?</p><p>This particular thought may come due to under development of pelvis. Other critical decision about school, work, house chores, and how to care for the new born among others, need to be made. In Kano, many teenage mothers experience obstructed labour due to poor development of pelvis. This always resulted in serious maternal morbidity, for example, Vessico Virginal Fistula (VVF) or maternal mortality. Age of marriage has traditionally been low in kinship-based societies and economies. In such areas, most girls married soon after menarche; fertility was high and consequently many children were born from teenage mothers. This was not considered to be a problem. The teenage mother receive good family and community supports. Timely quality antenatal care and deliveries were by Traditional Birth Attendants (TBAs).</p><p>In Abia and Imo States, some teenagers got pregnant for economic reasons, they gave birth and sold such babies. They are instances where some girls sold their babies for a token of ten thousand naira (N10,000)</p><p>The preventive programmes based on promoting abstinence in most Nigerian secondary schools, do not reduce teenage sex, pregnancy and motherhood. The school based clinics, sex education and contraceptive service programmes have little impact on teenage sexual activity. Teenage motherhood continues to rise in every state in Nigeria. Many teenage girls see themselves as having nothing to strive for as they cannot see graduating from a tertiary school because they have few role models to follow, their teachers give them little encouragement about their abilities, their families are chaotic and their friends are on drugs. So parenting looks more like the best option for them. Such girls think babies provide immediate source of unconditional love.</p><p>Effective prevention of unplanned teen pregnancies that will result in teenage motherhood will save the Nigerian society the cost she pays to support a teen mother her children and grand children. It would also break the cycle related to psychopathologies in our culture, including drug and alcohol abuse, fetal alcohol syndrome, drug induced birth defect, drops out of school, crime, domestic violence and poverty, for all teenagers that become mothers, before they were prepared, the society keeps paying the cost. This could be seen in most city centers when some of such teenagers beg for alms. Others rely on the generosity of members of the church or philanthropic society.</p><p>In Abia, Imo Enugu and Anambra state, the problem of teenage pregnancies is further compounding by the involvement of some fathers and advanced adults in the inducements of teenage girls to feed the baby factories with their offspring. Teenage pregnancy is linked with several issues that include low educational levels, higher rate of poverty, and other poorer outcomes in children of teenage mothers. Teenage pregnanc in most developing countries is often outside marriage. This comes with certain social stigma in many communities.</p><p>Drugs and alcohol that remove inhibition can easily trigger and encourage unintended sexual activities. It has not been comprehensively established that the drugs themselves directly influence teenagers to indulge in risky behaviours, or whether it is true that the teenagers that engage in drug use, are more likely to indulge in sexual activities. This is premised on the logic that correlation does not imply causation. The drugs that have a strongest evident linkage in teenage pregnancies include alcohol, ecstasy, cannabis and amphetamines.</p><p>Advance countries of the world try to see that their young ones are given the best formal education so that they can grow in knowledge, attitude and skills that will bring about increase in productivity and technological advancement, and in general economic growth and development. This process of formal Education, which starts at very tender age of less than one, is consolidated, when these persons are in their teens. Since the brain and other learning faculties have been fully developed. Losing these great human resources to unplanned pregnancies and teenage child bearing is a minus to any economy.</p><p><strong>Statement of the Problem</strong></p><p>In recent decades, teenage pregnancy and motherhood has become an important health issue. A great number of country experience this phenomenon, both developed and developing Pregnant teenagers face many of the obstetrics issues as other older women. There are however additional medical concerns for mothers aged under 15.Risks of low birth weight, premature labour, anemia and pre-eclampsia are connected to the biological age. For mothers age 15-19,risk are associated more with socio-economic factors than with biological effects of age. Teenage pregnancy and mother hood is a serious risk factor, and this mostly occurs when these teenage girls are having their first delivery.</p><p>Besides it is a well known fact that most teenage girls are not able to cope with some challenges that come with motherhood. Most teenage girls in the area under study are found to have at least a child, as such most of them either stop going to school completely or start schooling after having at least two or more children. Hence the researcher is interested in finding why such teenagers take to motherhood at such tender ages, despite all the known negative consequences associated with teenage pregnancy and motherhood.</p><p><strong>Research Questions;</strong></p><p>1. Are teenagers aware of the dangers of teenage pregnancy and motherhood?</p><p>2. What are the factors that predispose teenagers to pregnancy and childbearing?</p><p>3. Are teenagers aware of the various methods of preventing pregnancy?</p><p>4. Are teenagers aware of the negative outcomes associated with teenage motherhood?</p><p>5. Are teenagers from cultural background that encourages early marriage more at risk?</p><p>6. <strong>6. </strong>Are teenage girls whose fathers left home at their tender ages more at risk?</p><p><strong>Purpose of the Study</strong></p><p>The main purpose of the study is to find out why teenagers become mothers in the area under study. It is also to design interventions for teenage girls to make transition from adolescence to adulthood without having an unplanned birth</p><p><strong>Significance of the study</strong></p><p>The study will be beneficial to mothers, teenage girls, fathers and all custodians of teenagers, health educators policy planners, social institutions and the teeming population in Ika south local government area of Delta state. It will serve as a tool for counseling teenagers on the dangers of teenage pregnancies and motherhood.</p><p><strong>Scope/Delimitation of the Study</strong></p><p>The scope of the study is Ika south local government area which comprises Agbor, Abavo, Idumu esa</p><p>The study will be delimited to teenage mothers in Ika south local government area of Delta state.</p><p><strong>Limitation of the Study</strong></p><p>The study will be limited by some teenage mothers who may be too shy to respond to the questions from the researcher and the inadequate cooperation from some teenage mothers who might hoard information from the researcher. In order to overcome this challenge, the researcher intends to encourage these teenage mothers.</p>
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