Top Banner
Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine
34

Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Dec 17, 2015

Download

Documents

Gwen Bridges
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

1

Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers?

16 February 2011

Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior LecturerPublic Health Medicine

Page 2: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

2

Overview• Epidemiology of teenage pregnancy

• Impact on health and well-being of mother, baby, father

• Giving every child the best start in life– avoiding teenage pregnancy– supporting teenage parents

Page 3: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

3

Live birth rate to women aged 15–19. (1999 figures)[Source: Eurostat & Centre for Sexual Health Research, Southampton]

Lawlor et al. R Soc Med. 2004 March; 97(3): 121–123

Page 4: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Definitions

• Conceptions = pregnancies resulting in live births, stillbirths or legal terminations– Under 20 (13 – 19 years) – Under 18 (13 – 17 years)– Under 16 (13 – 15 years)

Teenage Pregnancy

4

Page 5: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Conception rates E & W

Teenage Pregnancy

5

Page 6: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Conception rates 2008 (<18)

Teenage Pregnancy

6

Per 1,000 women

Page 7: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Conceptions (<18) in Wales

Teenage Pregnancy

7

Per 1,000 women (2008 data)

Page 8: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Conceptions (<18) by WIMD

Teenage Pregnancy

8

1998-02 2000-04 2002-06 2004-08Ratio: Most deprived to

Middle deprived fifth 1.89 1.75 1.61 1.67

Source: STATSWALES

Page 9: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Conceptions 2008 (E & W)

Teenage Pregnancy

9

Page 10: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

10

Page 11: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Who suffers?

Teenage Pregnancy

11

Page 12: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

12

Page 13: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Evidence for risk factors (girls)

RIPPLE study (longitudinal data)1997 – 2001(Allen E JECH 2007;61:20-27)

Factor Univariate OR Adjusted OR

Lack of expectation of education at age 20

4.6 (1.8, 11.6) 8.4 (1.2, 56.7)

Expectation of being a parent at age 20

2.7 (1.2, 6.4) 1.9 (0.6, 6.0)

Drunk monthly or more 4.8 (3.1, 7.3) 2.1 (1.2, 4.0)

Peer pressure to have sex early 0.9 (0.6, 1.5) 2.1 (1.2, 3.7)

Easy communication with mother or female guardian

0.4 (0.2, 0.8) 0.3 (0.1, 0.7)

Main source of information includes school

0.4 (0.2, 0.9) 0.7 (0.3, 2.1)

Page 14: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Who suffers?

Teenage Pregnancy

14

• Mother

• Baby

• Father

Page 15: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Obstetric complications

Teenage Pregnancy

15

• Anaemia (Hb<10g/dl)

• Pregnancy induced hypertension

• Assisted births

Page 16: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Maternal mortality

• Overall rate 14 per 100,000• <20 9.9 per 100,000• 46% in most deprived compared

with least deprived• Unemployment

– RR 7.4 (95%CI 5.6, 9.0)

Teenage Pregnancy

16

Page 17: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Psycho-social outcomes

• More mental health difficulties• More emotional and behavioural

problems• Less likely to complete education

and training• More likely to be living in poverty

Teenage Pregnancy

17

Page 18: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Longer term mortality

Compared to mothers aged 20-24– 70% increased risk of premature death

in mothers <17 years– 50% increased risk in mothers aged

18 – 19 years– Causes of death:

• Cervical cancer, Ischaemic Heart disease, suicide, violence assault, homicide

Teenage Pregnancy

18

Source: Int J Obstet Gynaecol 2004; 111:793-9

Page 19: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Who suffers?

Teenage Pregnancy

19

• Mother

• Baby

• Father

Page 20: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Adverse baby outcomes

• Pre-term birth• Low birth weight• Small for gestational age• Neonatal mortality• Infant mortality

Teenage Pregnancy

20

Page 21: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Smoking during pregnancy

Teenage Pregnancy

21

Page 22: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Breastfeeding rates

Teenage Pregnancy

22

Page 23: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Early years outcomes

• Increased risk of – Harm, illness, accidents and injuries– Cognitive, behavioural and emotional

complications

• Attributable to mother’s mental state rather than young age

Teenage Pregnancy

23

Page 24: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

24

Page 25: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Who suffers?

Teenage Pregnancy

25

• Mother

• Baby

• Father

Page 26: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Evidence for risk factors (boys)

RIPPLE study (longitudinal data)1997 – 2001(Allen E JECH 2007;61:20-27)Outcome: pregnancy initiated by teenage boys

Factor Univariate OR Adjusted OR

Expectation of being a parent at age 20

2.5 (1.1, 5.5) 0.7 (0.2, 2.5)

Drunk monthly or more 3.4 (2.1, 5.5) 3.9 (1.7, 8.6)

Peer pressure to have sex early 3.7 (1.9, 7.3) 2.8 (0.7, 10.7)

Intent to skip school 3.5 (2.0, 6.2) 1.9 (0.6, 6.2)

Ability to identify sexual health services

1.0 (0.7, 1.5) 0.3 (0.1, 0.7)

Main source of information includes school

0.4 (0.2, 0.8) 0.4 (0.2, 0.9)

Page 27: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Young fathers

• Feel excluded

• Low earning potential– Damaging confidence and sense of self

• Benchmark against their own fathers

Teenage Pregnancy

27

Page 28: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Paternal health outcomes

• Poorly studied!

Teenage Pregnancy

28

Page 29: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Give every child the best start in life

Teenage Pregnancy

29

Page 30: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Give every child the best start in life

• Target to halve the under-18 conception rate in England by 2010 from the 1998 rate of 46.6 per 1,000

• 13% reduction in 2008

• Beyond 2010

Teenage Pregnancy

30

Page 31: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

31

• Increase sexual health and relationships literacy

• Improve access to good quality sexual health services

• Reduce the number of unintended pregnancies, particularly among teenage girls

Page 32: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

32

Page 33: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Teenage Pregnancy

33

Reproductive and Early years pathfinderInstitute of Public Health

PRIMARY OUTCOMES

Birth outcomes:

Birth weight, gestational age, congenital malformations, stillbirth, perinatal mortality

Child health outcomes: nutrition, growth, development hospital admissions, infection, respiratory health, injuries, education, obesity deaths.

Women’s health

Preconception, physical and mental health, smoking, alcohol, nutrition,

recreational drug use

Vulnerable groups e.g. teenage mothers

Intrauterine exposures

Health & Social Care

(Service Design and Quality)

Provision of health services, access, standards and quality of care

Fertility- time to pregnancy

Environmental exposures: Housing, neighbourhood and workplace

Life course outcomes

Page 34: Teenage Pregnancy 1 Teenage Pregnancy: Who suffers? 16 February 2011 Dr. Shantini Paranjothy, Clinical Senior Lecturer Public Health Medicine.

Reproductive and Early years pathfinderInstitute of Public Health

– Monitor epidemiology of the life course up to age 5

– Relate to evidence for effectiveness and current programmes in Wales

Teenage Pregnancy

34