Table Of Content

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Table of Content

Teenage Pregnancy2

Introduction2

Abortion6

Social Ostracism6

Child Neglect and Abandonment7

School Adjustment Difficulties for their Children7

Rape, Abuse and Incest8

Adoption9

Lack of Social Security9

Poverty10

Negative Effects on Domestic Life11

Could Teenage Pregnancy Be Beneficial?13

Conclusion14

Works Cited17

Teenage Pregnancy

Introduction

The swinging sixties left an echo that would lead to extensive research into adolescent sexuality. What adults were accepting as their rights, all too soon became during the process of socialization and imitation, what the young felt was "okay" to emulate - an exploration of the delights of unrestricted and unrestrained sexual activity. A recent newspaper report noted that most adolescents, irrespective of their culture, are sexually active before the age of twenty - even if their parents are reluctant to admit it.

The consequences have been an upsurge in the incidence of sexually transmitted diseases and in the number of unplanned and unwanted pregnancies among adolescents too young to assume the psychological and physical burden of parenthood. The medical literature of the late sixties and early seventies shows that concern and, that the medical profession was relatively unprepared for the challenge. Subsequent studies show that with appropriate medical surveillance, teenage pregnancy need be no more physiologically hazardous than it is for the older primipara (the first time pregnant). While the medical profession has coped with problems attendant upon childbearing by the very young, neither the family nor society has solved the problem of how to cope with "children having children."

How do we define "the very young" or "teenagers" or "adolescents"? In physiological terms, the definition would depend on the age of menarche. This would further depend on a definition of the time lapse between age of menarche and gestational age. Medically, the optimum time lapse between the two should be two years so as to obviate the physiological problems that could arise as a consequence of lack of physical readiness. The "punch line" is that should a girl begin to menstruate at age nine, after the age of eleven, statistically she should encounter no medical problems during her pregnancy at age eleven-and-a-half. She is thus not likely to fall prey to those problems commonly associated with "teenage pregnancy" such as gestational proteinuric hypertension, anemia, spontaneous premature labor or, run the risk of having a low birth-mass baby.

Research, however, does not fully support this contention. The pregnant teenager is "at risk," as is her unborn infant. There are serious physical and neurological problems of development associated with low birth-mass infants, and several reports show an association between early maturation and foetal growth.

Infant Mortality and Low Birth-mass Infants

Infant mortality is significantly linked to birth-mass. The lower the birth-mass, the less likely the infant is to survive, and there is an undisputed tendency for teenagers (and younger teenagers in particular) to give birth to low birth-mass infants.

Infants weighing less than 2,500 grams are more at risk for neurological and other developmental deficiencies (including cerebral palsy. Their nursing care also presents more problems for medical personnel, their young and inexperienced mothers, her family, and the state. The latter has to provide ...
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