Abstract

The objective was to estimate the direct medical cost of pregnancy care attributable to the failure of Mexico's teenage pregnancy prevention policy. From the provider's perspective, this economic study estimated the mean cost of prenatal care, childbirth, puerperium, abortion and complications. To quantify the costs attributable to policy failure, three scenarios were constructed: (a) total number of pregnancies; (b) number of pregnancies above the target; (c) number of unwanted pregnancies. The cost of providing contraceptive methods was also estimated and the characteristics of pregnant adolescents were described. Of the adolescents (n = 5,477,027), 30.2% were sexually active; 46.8% used contraception; 44.1% had become pregnant and 9.1% had an abortion. Most pregnant women (65%) attended secondary school or under; 30% dropped out of school; 72.5% lived with a partner; 72.3% had complications. The mean cost of pregnancy care was estimated at USD 2,210.55 and the mean cost of providing contraceptives at USD 64.95. The total cost of policy failure was estimated for each scenario (in millions): (a) USD 1,614.39, (b) USD 876.61 and (c) USD 171.50, respectively; whereas the annual cost of providing contraceptives in each scenario was estimated in: (a) USD 47.43, (b) USD 25.76 and (c) USD 5.04. The failure of the policy is expressed in the high frequency of pregnancy in low-income adolescents and in high costs for the health system. The provision of contraceptives is 34 times cheaper than pregnancy care and could, together with improved living conditions, contribute to reduce the frequency of adolescent pregnancies.

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