Prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in Rwanda

The rate of teenage pregnancy remains unacceptably high in most developing countries. In Rwanda, studies show a rapid increase over the past two decades despite the political achievements of women's empowerment, and efforts to curtail child sexual abuse. Unfortunately, the current knowledge of...

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Main Authors: Dieudonne Uwizeye, Ruben Muhayiteto, Evelyne Kantarama, Simeon Wiehler, Yusuf Murangwa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-10-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844020318806
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spelling doaj-445e7ed13619472dbd9010216776290b2020-11-25T04:02:09ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402020-10-01610e05037Prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in RwandaDieudonne Uwizeye0Ruben Muhayiteto1Evelyne Kantarama2Simeon Wiehler3Yusuf Murangwa4School of Governance, University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda; African Population and Health Research Center, Nairobi, Kenya; Corresponding author.National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda, Kigali, RwandaSchool of Medicine and Pharmacy, University of Rwanda, Kigali, RwandaSchool of Governance, University of Rwanda, Kigali, RwandaNational Institute of Statistics of Rwanda, Kigali, RwandaThe rate of teenage pregnancy remains unacceptably high in most developing countries. In Rwanda, studies show a rapid increase over the past two decades despite the political achievements of women's empowerment, and efforts to curtail child sexual abuse. Unfortunately, the current knowledge of the household determinants of teenage pregnancies in Rwanda is limited, as recent studies have focused on providing numbers with little analysis of proximate causal factors or focused on the individual determinants. The study uses secondary data from the recent Rwanda Demographic and Health Survey (RDHS: 2014–2015) to analyse household factors associated with teenage pregnancies in Rwanda. In addition to descriptive analysis, we ran logistic regression models to determine the level of association between teenage pregnancy and household socioeconomic characteristics.Results indicate that marital status and age of household head, household size, number of bedrooms given the size of the household, and the educational level of the household-head are significantly associated with teenage pregnancy (p < 0.01). Teen girls from small households are more likely to get pregnant than those from large families, while financial, social and educational empowerment of parents, and harmonious household contexts contribute to lessening the cases of teenage pregnancy. It indicates that social and economic support to teen girls which include parental supervision, guidance, and financial care are essential aspects to consider in order to reduce teenage pregnancy rates. The study suggests that in addition to efforts directed to teens themselves, strategies for reducing teen pregnancies should focus on a range of household-level contexts that form two broad categories: empowering parents and maintaining parents' harmonious decisions on teen girls.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844020318806SociologyPsychologyQuality of lifeSocial organisationHuman rightsTeenage pregnancy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dieudonne Uwizeye
Ruben Muhayiteto
Evelyne Kantarama
Simeon Wiehler
Yusuf Murangwa
spellingShingle Dieudonne Uwizeye
Ruben Muhayiteto
Evelyne Kantarama
Simeon Wiehler
Yusuf Murangwa
Prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in Rwanda
Heliyon
Sociology
Psychology
Quality of life
Social organisation
Human rights
Teenage pregnancy
author_facet Dieudonne Uwizeye
Ruben Muhayiteto
Evelyne Kantarama
Simeon Wiehler
Yusuf Murangwa
author_sort Dieudonne Uwizeye
title Prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in Rwanda
title_short Prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in Rwanda
title_full Prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in Rwanda
title_fullStr Prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in Rwanda
title_sort prevalence of teenage pregnancy and the associated contextual correlates in rwanda
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2020-10-01
description The rate of teenage pregnancy remains unacceptably high in most developing countries. In Rwanda, studies show a rapid increase over the past two decades despite the political achievements of women's empowerment, and efforts to curtail child sexual abuse. Unfortunately, the current knowledge of the household determinants of teenage pregnancies in Rwanda is limited, as recent studies have focused on providing numbers with little analysis of proximate causal factors or focused on the individual determinants. The study uses secondary data from the recent Rwanda Demographic and Health Survey (RDHS: 2014–2015) to analyse household factors associated with teenage pregnancies in Rwanda. In addition to descriptive analysis, we ran logistic regression models to determine the level of association between teenage pregnancy and household socioeconomic characteristics.Results indicate that marital status and age of household head, household size, number of bedrooms given the size of the household, and the educational level of the household-head are significantly associated with teenage pregnancy (p < 0.01). Teen girls from small households are more likely to get pregnant than those from large families, while financial, social and educational empowerment of parents, and harmonious household contexts contribute to lessening the cases of teenage pregnancy. It indicates that social and economic support to teen girls which include parental supervision, guidance, and financial care are essential aspects to consider in order to reduce teenage pregnancy rates. The study suggests that in addition to efforts directed to teens themselves, strategies for reducing teen pregnancies should focus on a range of household-level contexts that form two broad categories: empowering parents and maintaining parents' harmonious decisions on teen girls.
topic Sociology
Psychology
Quality of life
Social organisation
Human rights
Teenage pregnancy
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844020318806
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