What is it about?

In Tanzania, approximately 25% of adolescents give birth and 50% more become sexually active during adolescence. We hypothesised that reproductive health education and services for adolescent girls are inaccessible and conducted this study to gain insights into their perceptions of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and barriers to reproductive health service utilisation in rural Mwanza, Tanzania. We conducted nine focus groups among pregnant adolescents aged 15–20 years. Data were transcribed, translated and coded for relevant themes using NVivo10 software for qualitative data analysis. We found that ost participants were aware of the dangers of STIs to themselves and their unborn babies, but did not perceive themselves as at risk of acquiring STIs. They viewed condoms as ineffective for preventing STIs and pregnancies and unnecessary for those in committed relationships. Stigma, long waiting times, and lack of privacy in the clinics discouraged adolescent girls from seeking reproductive health care. Reproductive health care for adolescent girls who are not pregnant is practically nonexistent in Tanzania. Healthcare access for pregnant young women is also limited. Targeted changes to increase clinic accessibility and to provide reproductive health education to all rather than only pregnant women have the potential to address these gaps.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

this study has managed to outline some important interventions needed to increase clinic accessibility and to provide reproductive health education to all adolescents rather than only pregnant women.

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Barriers to access reproductive health care for pregnant adolescent girls: a qualitative study in Tanzania, Acta Paediatrica, February 2015, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/apa.12886.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page