Ashley L White1, Emily S Mann2, Fiona Larkan3. 1. Department of Health Promotion, Education, and Behaviour, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, USA. Electronic address: alw3@email.sc.edu. 2. Department of Health Promotion, Education, and Behaviour, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, USA. Electronic address: emann@mailbox.sc.edu. 3. Centre for Global Health, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland. Electronic address: larkanf@tcd.ie.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While the adverse health outcomes and broader economic and social factors associated with adolescent motherhood are well documented globally, limited research on unplanned pregnancy and birth among young women in Pacific Island nations exists. The study addresses this gap in the literature by examining the social and contextual factors that inform contraceptive knowledge, attitudes, and use among young women in the Cook Islands. METHODS: Individual, in-depth interviews were conducted with ten women who became mothers before age twenty. Adolescents' contraceptive knowledge, attitudes, and behaviours were examined while taking into account the context in which they experienced an unplanned birth. FINDINGS: Five participants were not using a contraceptive method when they became pregnant, believing they would not become pregnant. The remaining participants were using oral contraception but doing so inconsistently. Four participants had a sexual debut prior to age 15. The findings suggest a need to expand comprehensive approaches to sexual and reproductive health education, increase access to long-acting reversible contraceptive methods, and decrease the stigma associated with accessing family planning services in order to more effectively prevent unplanned pregnancy among adolescents in the Cook Islands. INTERPRETATION: The findings provide insight into the factors contributing to high rates of adolescent pregnancy and birth in the Pacific region and suggest how public health advocates and health care providers might reduce reproductive health disparities in the Cook Islands and similar Pacific Island nations.
BACKGROUND: While the adverse health outcomes and broader economic and social factors associated with adolescent motherhood are well documented globally, limited research on unplanned pregnancy and birth among young women in Pacific Island nations exists. The study addresses this gap in the literature by examining the social and contextual factors that inform contraceptive knowledge, attitudes, and use among young women in the Cook Islands. METHODS: Individual, in-depth interviews were conducted with ten women who became mothers before age twenty. Adolescents' contraceptive knowledge, attitudes, and behaviours were examined while taking into account the context in which they experienced an unplanned birth. FINDINGS: Five participants were not using a contraceptive method when they became pregnant, believing they would not become pregnant. The remaining participants were using oral contraception but doing so inconsistently. Four participants had a sexual debut prior to age 15. The findings suggest a need to expand comprehensive approaches to sexual and reproductive health education, increase access to long-acting reversible contraceptive methods, and decrease the stigma associated with accessing family planning services in order to more effectively prevent unplanned pregnancy among adolescents in the Cook Islands. INTERPRETATION: The findings provide insight into the factors contributing to high rates of adolescent pregnancy and birth in the Pacific region and suggest how public health advocates and health care providers might reduce reproductive health disparities in the Cook Islands and similar Pacific Island nations.
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