| Literature DB >> 29744286 |
Manasi Kumar1, Keng-Yen Huang2, Caleb Othieno1, Dalton Wamalwa3, Beatrice Madeghe4, Judith Osok1, Simon Njuguna Kahonge5, Joyce Nato6, Mary McKernon McKay7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The key objective of this paper is to provide a phenomenological account of the mental health challenges and experiences of adolescent new mothers. We explore the role of social support and the absence of empathy plays in depression among pregnant adolescents. The project also collected data on the adolescents' caregiving environment which includes the adolescents' mothers, their partners, the community, and health care workers, as well as feedback from staff nurses at the maternal and child health centers. The caregivers provide additional insight into some of the barriers to access of mental health services and pregnancy care, and the etiology of adolescents' distress.Entities:
Keywords: Community support; Food insecurity; Pregnant adolescent in Nairobi; Primary health care facility; Stigma
Year: 2017 PMID: 29744286 PMCID: PMC5937539 DOI: 10.1007/s40609-017-0102-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Soc Welf ISSN: 2196-8799
Participants, their numbers and location, and core areas explored in the interviews
| Participants, | Interview type | Core areas explored |
|---|---|---|
| Sample 1. Depressed pregnant adolescents, ( | Key informant interviews | Their personal/emotional experiences, relationships, and circumstances of pregnancy, family and social support available, interface with health facility, plans for future |
| Sample 2. Caregivers of pregnant adolescents ( | Key informant interviews | Their reaction to the pregnancy, resources available to support the adolescent, plans for future for adolescent and the baby, support from community and CHWs |
| Sample 3. (i) Follow-up from sample 1: new adolescent mothers who gave birth, ( | (i) Key informant interviews | Reflecting on their experience of pregnancy, evaluation of support available from family, partner, health facility, and CHWs. Knowledge about adolescent pregnancy, their mental health problems, referrals and support available to them and their caregivers, challenges in working with this group |
| Sample 4. HW, CHWs, MCH staff/medical staff, ( | Two focused group discussions | Experience and knowledge about adolescent pregnancy and their mental health problems, referrals and health facility support and engagement, challenges in being a bridge between families and the health care system |
Multi-stakeholder views on adolescent pregnancy and depression
| Sample 1: | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Study samples and key interview objectives | Core themes | Corresponding vignettes from interviews | |
Personal experiences (positive or negative) Challenges (economic, social, medical) Psychological well-being (experience with depression particularly) Coping mechanisms |
Negative experiences were as follows: Majority of depressed pregnant adolescents did not receive needed support from boyfriend or family members. The most painful thing was that the boyfriend/partner vanished from the sight once a girl was pregnant. Two girls were working as sex workers and in a disconnected and distant voice mentioned that this was the fate of their lot. The main challenge was stigma, unacceptability by the family starting from the male figurehead. For most girls. it was a negative experience filled with shame. For two adolescents, the partners were neighbors who rejected them when they learnt about the pregnancy. Even for the individual with family support ( Food and financial insecurity, and end of education and a struggle to deal with pregnancy and baby while thinking of finding a job. The immediate implication is that the girl has not been focusing on her studies/work but the pregnancy is a punishment for her transgressions. Apathy but it cannot be avoided as the girls or their families cannot afford healthcare. At times. CHWs help map the communication gap between the nurses and girls/patients Soliciting maternal support so that the baby can be looked after and the adolescent can find work. Problem solving and staying positive by focusing on the baby was a potential support and a loving being (in Kenyan cultural imagination the baby is highly valued). Among 8 interviewed depressed adolescents, 3 were accompanied by their mothers during prenatal visit, and 1 was accompanied by partner. Most girls said that the boyfriends denied that the baby was theirs even when the adolescent’s parents pursued the boy in owning up responsibility. The mother/other maternal figures are a little tolerant but the father and his family use this opportunity to caste a dark shadow on the irresponsibility of the adolescent’s mother in parenting her. | “I feel embarrassed all the time and also feel that I have let them (family) down.”-15 years old | |
| Sample 2: | |||
Personal experiences (positive or negative reaction) | Following themes emerged from adolescents’ mothers who accompany child during health visit were (a) their The most poignant descriptions by the mothers were that they had babies when they were adolescents themselves and tried all their best for these circumstances to not repeat in their children’s lives. Mothers did think of this to be acts of transgressions but were more tolerant. They also lamented the choice of boys such that the same abandonment should repeat itself. The caregivers refer to their own experience of feeling let down by the adolescent, own memories of early pregnancy and feeling very let down by the family, the adolescent as well as the boyfriend. They also remember they had no friend accompanied and neither did any neighbor Their main concern was for the daughter’s disconnect from education, employment or a decent future. Alluding to the price girls have to pay for something that involves men and women together The caregivers are less explicit or interested in addressing depression but more worried about provisioning for the growing needs of the adolescent, her baby. Acceptance that the situation is depressing and challenging for the young person Grandmothers came and once a maternal aunt came— same concerns but also worries about their own burden increasing | “I wrote a letter and took to their home, his mother was also shocked. In the letter I told them as the mother, I will inform you of her progress, but I would also like you to talk to your son so we all see the way forward. I wrote the letter because I didn’t want to talk too much out of anger. So far I have not got any positive feedback. My husband does not want me to call them.”-15-year-old mother | |
| Sample 3: | |||
Feeling change Feeling | Focused group results indicated Worries around breastfeeding and mother’s own nutritional care. Not receiving enough money or material support from parents/partner. Feeling very low, drained out, and demotivated due to high pressure, lack of support, and material provision to care for the baby No parenting program or information readily available in the community or health center Roles: Balance parenting with other responsibilities) Sources of support (for parenting related questions, for psychological support (for stress, sadness, depression), type of services needed) Challenges (general challenges, sources of stress, food security, relationship with partners, change roles as a parent) Finding means of livelihood to sustain this unit (sense of being a dyad) | “Problems with feeding our own selves as the food is limited in the house, some days we have to go hungry and we are told by the nurses to still keep feeding the baby as the body can still make milk.” (three 16-, 17-, and 15-year-old adolescent girls share same experience during the FGD) | |
| Sample 4: | |||
| One key theme emerged was These girls know nothing about caregiving and are in such a difficult role as mothers Physically weak and emotionally disturbed girls and how would they attend to the needs of a new born The domestic environment generates more shame and stigma; there is also role conflict between adolescents parents about their girls’ plight. Gaps There are big gaps in thinking holistically about health needs of young parents and their children There is another gap in engaging with male partners who seem absent from the system No programmatic focus on mental health or training of CHWs on mental health, focus on adolescents Absence of networking with iNGOs to provide real resources to women and children such as food, supplements, and information. This (maternal depression) is the most needed service but there’s Both health professionals and CHWs agree that no services directed towards psychosocial support of parents or parenting challenges, or towards new/adolescent parents are in place. The adolescent friendly services are not there at all. The infant and child care services are minimal and do not provide relief for everyday stressful events, there are not resources or support networks available such as a breastfeeding support group Health workers say no child MH or parenting training has ever been provided to them Resource and cost: Sometimes the health facility is so pressed with time and resources that not all patients are attended to. for patients the transport costs matters so if not seen then unlikely to return again and again | “We are approachable and can link them back to the health facility.”-male CHW in Kariobangi | ||
Core issues flagged off by the MCH personnel and community health workers on challenges before pregnant adolescents
| Thematic domain, group that voiced these | Underlying dimensions with illustrations |
|---|---|
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“Their minds have been dealing with chemistry, maths and friendships …. To direct Ones mind to the care of the baby and discontinuation of studies is the key challenge with these pregnant adolescents or new mothers” “Support from other women in their lives esp. siblings, mothers, is important …. social support is so poor as their native homes may be far away from Nairobi ….” “ think peer pressure contributes a lot because you find a young girl has a friend who is married with a kid and what of her. When she goes to try out she finds it hard to sustain since she was going so as to be the same as her friend but find that it’s not the same.” | |
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“If they have missed appointments or struggling to make end meet, we can be approached and we link these girls back to the health facility…the community too entrusts us with responsibilities when there are complicated circumstances in life of a person” “The men have to be educated about their role in looking after the health of their children, at the moment they have distanced themselves from this and are mainly looking at food to put on the table” “We refer them to the chief, take them for free dress making or hair weaving classes. There’s someone we find to connect them to when need be. We are there to support them, when they shed tears and are inconsolable we offer a friendly shoulder” “We have to work with both boys and girls to educate them about their rights.” | |
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“I told her that God has a reason because there are many who wish to have kids but they can’t so she should persevere, I think you saw how she was walking weakly (mhh …. All prompt) she is thinking very much.” “We told her that women in our culture have to be brave and bring up children ourselves. So investing in elders and community advisors like us would help her bring up the baby.” | |
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“I would like to be able to start a support group for these mothers. I would like to find a supporter (funder) who could provide resources for these girls to meet, discuss what they need for their future, their babies and for themselves. When women got money for transport or a plate of food on their returning appointment, relaxing and talking to one another became easy …” “In the HIV context, the mentor mother program has been a great success.” “There was a support group in existence last year …. don’t know how and why it died .… probably the funding faded away.” |