Abstract

BackgroundUntil recently, global public health initiatives have tended to overlook the ways that social factors shape adolescent health, and particularly how these dynamics affect the specific needs of adolescents in relation to information about puberty, menstruation and sexual health. This article draws on mixed methods data from rural and urban areas of Ethiopia to explore how access to health information and resources - and subsequently health outcomes - for adolescents are mediated by gender and age norms, living in different geographical locations, poverty, disability and migration.MethodsData was collected in 2017–2018 for the Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence (GAGE) mixed-methods longitudinal research baseline in three regions of Ethiopia (Afar, Amhara and Oromia). Quantitative data was collected from over 6800 adolescents and their caregivers, with qualitative data obtained from a sub-sample of 220 adolescents, their families and communities. Adolescent participants shared their experiences of health, illness and nutrition over the previous year; their knowledge and sources of information about sexual and reproductive health and puberty; and their attitudes toward sexual and reproductive health. Regression analysis was used to explore differences by gender, age, rural/urban residence, and disability status, across a set of adolescents’ health knowledge and other outcomes in the quantitative data. Intersectional analysis was used in analysing the qualitative data.ResultsAnalysis suggested that gender inequality intersects with age, disability and rural/urban differences to shape young people’s access to information about puberty, with knowledge about this topic particularly lacking amongst younger adolescents in rural areas. Drought and lack of access to clean water exacerbates health challenges for adolescents in rural areas, where a lack of information and absence of access to preventive healthcare services can lead to permanent disability. The research also found that gaps in both school-based and alternative sources of education about puberty and menstruation reinforce stigma and misinformation, especially in rural areas where adolescents have higher school attrition rates. Gendered cultural norms that place high value on marriage and motherhood generate barriers to contraceptive use, particularly in certain rural communities.ConclusionsAs they progress through adolescence, young people’s overall health and access to information about their changing bodies is heavily shaped by intersecting social identities. Structural disadvantages such as poverty, distress migration and differential access to healthcare intersect with gender norms to generate further inequalities in adolescent girls’ and boys’ health outcomes.

Highlights

  • Until recently, global public health initiatives have tended to overlook the ways that social factors shape adolescent health, and how these dynamics affect the specific needs of adolescents in relation to information about puberty, menstruation and sexual health

  • Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence (GAGE) data shows that rural/urban inequalities lead to unequal general health and nutrition outcomes for adolescents of both genders, and that disability amplifies these inequalities

  • There was significant variation across urban/rural residential location, with those living in rural areas 4% less likely to report good health than their urban counterparts

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Summary

Introduction

Global public health initiatives have tended to overlook the ways that social factors shape adolescent health, and how these dynamics affect the specific needs of adolescents in relation to information about puberty, menstruation and sexual health. As the Commission highlights, until very recently, global public health initiatives have overlooked the specific needs of adolescents and young adults, leading them to be ‘left behind’ [2] within health policies and programming. Ethiopia is a strong case study for exploring these issues It is a lower-income country which has made significant investments in health over the last two decades, and the government’s system of ‘health extension workers’ is held up in Africa as a model of good practice. Despite efforts to expand ‘youth friendly programming’ through the National Adolescent and Youth Reproductive Health Strategy (2016–2020), health programming in Ethiopia still pays limited attention to gender and other dynamics of diversity which produce marginality for some adolescents in relation to health

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