To keep or not to keep? Decision making in adolescent pregnancies in Jamestown, Ghana
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Plos One
Abstract
Background
Jamestown, an urban coastal slum in Accra, Ghana, has one of the highest adolescent
pregnancy rates in the country. We sought to understand the decision (to keep or terminate)
factors and experiences surrounding adolescent pregnancies.
Methods
Thirty semi-structured indepth interviews were carried out among adolescents (aged 13–19
years) who had been pregnant at least once. Half of these were adolescent mothers and the
other half had at least one past experience of induced abortion. A pretested and validated
questionnaire to assess the awareness and use of contraception in adolescent participants
was also administered. To aid social contextualization, semi-structured in depth interviews
were carried out among 23 purposively selected stakeholders.
Results
The main role players in decision making included family, friends, school teachers and the
partner, with pregnant adolescents playing the most prominent role. Adolescents showed a
high degree of certainty in deciding to either abort or carry pregnancies to term. Interestingly,
religious considerations were rarely taken into account. Although almost all adolescents
(96.1%) were aware of contraception, none was using any prior to getting pregnant. Of
the 15 adolescents who had had abortion experiences, 13 (87.0%) were carried out under
unsafe circumstances. The main barriers to accessing safe abortion services included poor
awareness of the fairly liberal nature of the Ghanaian abortion law, stigma, high cost and
non-harmonization of safe abortion service fees, negative abortion experiences (death and
bleeding), and distrust in the health care providers. Adolescents who chose to continue their
pregnancies to term were motivated by personal and sociocultural factors.Conclusion
Decision-making in adolescent pregnancies is influenced by multiple external factors, many
of which are modifiable. Despite legal access to services, options for the safe termination
of pregnancy or its prevention are not predominantly taken, resulting in a high number of
negative experiences and outcomes. Including safe abortion care within the sexual and
reproductive health package, could diminish barriers to safe abortion services. Given the
vulnerability of the Jamestown setting, a comprehensive sexual education package that
addresses the main decision factors is recommended. Interventions aiming to reduce adolescent
pregnancy rates should also recognize that adolescent pregnancies are culturally
acceptable in some settings, and under certain circumstances, are desired by the adolescents
themselves.
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Research Article
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Citation
Engelbert Bain L, Zweekhorst MBM, Amoakoh-Coleman M, Muftugil-Yalcin S, Omolade AI-O, Becquet R, et al. (2019) To keep or not to keep? Decision making in adolescent pregnancies in Jamestown, Ghana. PLoS ONE 14(9): e0221789. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221789