The rate of teen pregnancies in Kenya has remained largely
unchanged over the years, a survey shows, turning the spotlight on the
effectiveness of ongoing initiatives aimed at curbing the problem.
Pregnancy
among teens aged 15-19 stands at about 18.1 percent — an insignificant
change since 1993 when it was estimated at 20.5 percent, according to a
report by the African Institute for Development Policy (AFIDEP).
Narok,
Samburu and West Pokot top in teenage pregnancies in Kenya, a new
survey showed, underlining the struggles to end retrogressive practices
among some pastoral communities which exposed young girls to early sex.
An
estimated 68 percent of girls aged 15-24 years in Narok have ever
fallen pregnant, according to AFIDEP. The situation is equally bad in
Samburu and West Pokot.
Teenage pregnancies remain a
challenge in pastoralist communities partly due to cultural practices
such as early marriages, polygamy, low literacy levels, especially among
women and low access to contraceptives.
Pastoral communities are the most polygamous in Kenya, according to a survey by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics.
Mandera
recorded the highest number of polygamous unions (35 percent), followed
by West Pokot (25 per cent), Turkana (20.3 per cent) and Narok (16.9
per cent) — partly explaining why teenage pregnancies may be rife in
pastoral counties.
In contrast, counties in central Kenya recorded low levels of
polygamous unions. At the county level, the highest proportion of the
population in monogamous unions was recorded in Kirinyaga (63.3 per
cent) followed by Nakuru (62.6 per cent) and Nyandarua (61.8 per cent).
The high teen pregnancies in the pastoral counties have also been linked to low access and use of contraceptives.
Research
by the Performance Monitoring and Accountability (PMA 2020) reveals
that there is markedly low use of contraceptives in pastoral counties
with Mandera and Wajir both registering a usage of just two per cent.
Others are Garissa (six per cent), Turkana (10 per cent), Marsabit (12
per cent) and West Pokot (14 per cent).
Central Kenya tops in the use of contraceptives among women.
An estimated 73 per cent of women in the region use birth control devices and drugs — collectively known as contraceptives.
The
region is followed by eastern at 70 percent and Nairobi with 63 per
cent. The use of contraceptives is lowest among women in northeastern at
three percent, Coast at 44 percent and Rift Valley at 53 percent.
In
terms of individual counties, Kirinyaga tops countrywide at 81 per cent
against a national average of 58 percent. Others with high rates of
contraceptive use are Makueni (80 percent), Meru (78 percent), Machakos
(76 percent), Tharaka Nithi (74 per ent) and Kiambu (74 per cent).
The
Health ministry targets to increase the number of 15-19-year-old women —
both single and married-accessing modern contraceptives by 10 percent.
The
National Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Policy is dedicated
to reducing early and unintended pregnancies by enhancing the existing
service provision channels to provide accurate information and services
on a wide range of contraceptive methods to capture the diverse needs of
adolescents. The ultimate goal is to reduce teen childbearing from 17.7
percent in 2009 to eight percent by 2030. Currently, the research by
AFIDEP shows that only 43 per cent of all women aged 15 to 49 have
access to modern contraception while only 13 percent of those aged 18-24
have access to contraception.
Pregnancies among
schoolgirls continue to be a leading cause of school dropouts,
accounting for about 25 percent of dropouts in sub-Saharan Africa, yet
evidence shows that each extra year a girl stays in school increases
their future earnings by 10-20 percent.
Experts at AFIDEP and United Nations Population Fund have
proposed wide-ranging interventions to lower teen pregnancies to eight
percent teen by 2030.
They said comprehensive sex
education would help curb early pregnancies among schoolgoing girls. The
experts also recommended for a sustained campaign against harmful
cultural practices which fanned teen pregnancies and improved access to
modern contraceptives.
Although there are diverse types
of contraceptives in the market, implants have become the most popular,
supplanting injectable, especially among poor and uneducated women in
Kenya who are taking advantage of free facilities in public health
centres, a different survey recently showed.
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