Adolescent girls who are already mothers

By Morenike Ukpong-Folayan

Adolescent girls keep rating the need to prevent pregnancy higher than the need to prevent HIV infection. Pregnancy outside marriage causes a lot of stigma in Nigeria. Pregnancy outside marriage is not welcome in most home in Northern, eastern and western Nigeria. Yet access to sexual and reproductive health commodities that will help prevent pregnancies are not easy to come by.

Despite the shame that comes with being pregnant, teen pregnancy is not a rarity. It is a growing problem for many communities, especially rural communities where procurement of abortion from professionals comes with lots of challenges.

Lots of girls who leave school are increasingly finding it difficult to be engaged productively due to low rates of admission into higher institutions, poor access to vocational training and low competency to start small-scale businesses.Being idle increases their risk of frolicking around with the opposite sex and engaging in sex.

A good number of adolescent girls enjoy having sex. They discover its pleasure and do not want to discontinue. They want a way to enjoy sex without becoming pregnant. Sadly, adolescents’ awareness about contraception options is poor.

For the few that are self-educated about possible contraception use, access to contraception is also poor. Health care workers are usually very unwilling to provide adolescents with contraception.

Many are often limited to the use of condom – a device that is dependent on the boy’s willingness to use the product and to use it correctly and consistently.The prevention of HIV infection is not a priority for many adolescent girls. HIV infection may well be hidden for many, many years. But pregnancy cannot be hidden.

The shame and consequences come rapidly – drop out from school, increased risk of not getting a suitor in the community,  further hardship for the girl and her family to name a few, and the stigma and shame the entire family has to face in the community.Yet the risk for HIV infection for adolescents who start having sex at a young age is high. She is likely to change sex partners multiple times, have challenges negotiating the use of condom, and risk selling sex to be able to have access to some needs in life.

Adolescent girls need easily accessible products that can help prevent or reduce the risk of pregnancy, sexually transmitted infection and HIV infection.  HIV prevention is as equally important as the prevention of unwanted adolescent pregnancies.The clear need for the development of technologies that will enhance the ability of adolescent girls to prevent pregnancy, HIV and sexually transmitted infection was highlighted very clearly by Pauline Irungu, the Policy and Advocacy Manager at PATH, during the Biomedical HIV Prevention Forum that held on the 3rd of December 2017 in Abidjan at part of the 2017 ICASA Conference.Pauline noted that 66% of global maternal deaths and 66% of the new HIV infections in 2015 occurred in sub-Saharan Africa.

While progress has been made in reducing mother to child transmission, much more remains to be done including the need to address the unmet need for contraception for 25% of women.Sadly, a growing number of young people aged 10–24years are living with HIV in the region. These young persons living with HIV have particular needs and challenges related to their sexual and reproductive health and rights.