| Literature DB >> 27938638 |
Caroline Moisan1, Chloé Baril1, Gina Muckle1,2, Richard E Belanger1,3.
Abstract
Teen pregnancy is depicted around the world as an important cause of health disparities both for the child and the mother. Accordingly, much effort has been invested in its prevention and led to its decline in the northern hemisphere since the mid-1990s. Despite that, high rates are still observed in the circumpolar regions. As Inuit communities have granted better understanding of teenage pregnancy a priority for the coming years, this article comprehensively reviews this multidimensional issue. By depicting current prevalence, likely determinants and possible impacts documented among Inuit of Canada, Alaska and Greenland, and contrasting them to common knowledge that has emerged from other populations over the years, great gaps surface. In some regions, the number of pregnancies per number of Inuit women aged between 15 and 19 years has increased since the turn of the millennium, while statistics from others are either absent or difficult to compare. Only few likely determinants of teenage pregnancy such as low education and some household factors have actually been recognized among Inuit populations. Documented impacts of early pregnancy on Inuit women and their children are also limited compared to those from other populations. As a way to better address early pregnancy in the circumpolar context, the defence for additional scientific efforts and the provision of culturally adapted sexual health prevention programmes appear critical.Entities:
Keywords: Inuit; adolescent; cross-cultural comparison; pregnancy; reproductive health; review; teen
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27938638 PMCID: PMC5149662 DOI: 10.3402/ijch.v75.31790
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Circumpolar Health ISSN: 1239-9736 Impact factor: 1.228
Likely determinants known to be related to teenage pregnancies.
| Inuit | AI/AN | General population | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Psychological and socio-economic factors | |||
| Low education of teen | x | x | x |
| Single/divorced/separated/unmarried teen mother | x | x | x |
| Low household income | x | x | x |
| Single-parent household or large family living in teen's house | x | x | x |
| Overcrowding and house in need of major repairs | x | ||
| Low education of teens’ parents | x | ||
| Divorced/separated parents of teen | x | ||
| Teenage pregnancy of the mother/siblings of the teen | x | ||
| Substance use of teen | x | ||
| Mental illness (distress, depression) of teen | x | x | |
| Low self-esteem of teen | x | ||
| Sexual behaviours | |||
| Lacking access to or making poor use of contraception | x | x | |
| Early sexual activity | x | x | |
| Frequency of sexual intercourse | x | x | |
| Substance use before sexual intercourse | x | x | |
| Diverse sexual risky behaviours (ever having sex, multiple partners, recent sexual intercourse) | x | x |
AI/AN, American Indian/Alaska Native.