Abstract

BackgroundAdolescent pregnancies present a great public health burden in Kenya and Sub-Saharan Africa (UNFPA, Motherhood in Childhood: Facing the challenge of Adolescent Pregnancy, 2013). The disenfranchisement from public institutions and services is further compounded by cultural stigma and gender inequality creating emotional, psychosocial, health, and educational problems in the lives of vulnerable pregnant adolescents (Int J Adolesc Med Health 15(4):321–9, 2003; BMC Public Health 8:83, 2008). In this paper we have applied an engagement interview framework to examine interpersonal, practical, and cultural challenges faced by pregnant adolescents.MethodsUsing a qualitative study design, 12 pregnant adolescents (ages 15–19) visiting a health facility’s antenatal services in Nairobi were interviewed. All recruited adolescents were pregnant for the first time and screened positive on the nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) with 16% of 176 participants interviewed in a descriptive survey in the same Kangemi primary health facility found to be severely depressed (Osok et al., Depression and its psychosocial risk factors in pregnant Kenyan adolescents: a cross-sectional study in a community health Centre of Nairobi, BMC Psychiatry, 2018 18:136 https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-018-1706-y). An engagement interview approach (Social Work 52(4):295–308, 2007) was applied to elicit various practical, psychological, interpersonal, and cultural barriers to life adjustment, service access, obtaining resources, and psychosocial support related to pregnancy. Grounded theory method was applied for qualitative data sifting and analysis (Strauss and Corbin, Basics of qualitative research, 1990).ResultsFindings revealed that pregnant adolescents face four major areas of challenges, including depression, anxiety and stress around the pregnancy, denial of the pregnancy, lack of basic needs provisions and care, and restricted educational or livelihood opportunities for personal development post pregnancy. These challenges were related both to existing social and cultural values/norms on gender and traditional family structure, as well as to service structural barriers (including prenatal care, mental health care, newborn care, parenting support services). More importantly, dealing with these challenges has led to negative mental health consequences in adolescent pregnant girls, including feeling insecure about the future, feeling very defeated and sad to be pregnant, and feeling unsupported and disempowered in providing care for the baby.ConclusionsFindings have implications for service planning, including developing more integrated mental health services for pregnant adolescents. Additionally, we felt a need for developing reproductive education and information dissemination strategies to improve community members’ knowledge of pregnant adolescent mental health issues.

Highlights

  • Adolescent pregnancies present a great public health burden in Kenya and Sub-Saharan Africa (UNFPA, Motherhood in Childhood: Facing the challenge of Adolescent Pregnancy, 2013)

  • Findings revealed that pregnant adolescents face four major areas of challenges, including depression, anxiety and stress around the pregnancy, denial of the pregnancy, lack of basic needs provisions and care, and restricted educational or livelihood opportunities for personal development post pregnancy

  • This situation is compounded by social stigma from the immediate and extended family who feel that the pregnant adolescent has brought shame and disgrace to the family

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Summary

Introduction

Adolescent pregnancies present a great public health burden in Kenya and Sub-Saharan Africa (UNFPA, Motherhood in Childhood: Facing the challenge of Adolescent Pregnancy, 2013). Adolescent pregnancy is a reproductive health issue and a cause and an outcome of shifting socio-cultural practices around family rearing, social exclusion of the girl child This disenfranchisement is compounded by weak institutional, legal, and social protection [1,2,3]. The UNICEF report further states that SSA is the only region in the world where the adolescent population continues to expand and is projected to have the greatest number of adolescents of any region by 2050 This is the most challenging place for an adolescent to live in terms of high rates of poverty, gender-based violence, disability, stigma, and discriminatory laws that may curtail adolescents’ access to services, including HIV prevention and treatment, education, assistance in humanitarian emergencies, maternal health, and reproductive care for adolescent girls [4, 5]. With changing nature of family ties due to urbanization, the social protection that these mechanisms offered previously no longer exists leaving young girls highly vulnerable and exposed to structural violence starting from the family itself

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