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Rate Of Adolescent Pregnancies Decline In Jamaica

KINGSTON, Jamaica CMC – The executive director of the Women’s Centre of Jamaica Foundation (WCJF), Dr. Zoe Simpson, says the rate of adolescent pregnancies in Jamaica is trending down, as a result of several interventions by government.

Pregnant young women being checked out at the Women’s Centre of Jamaica Foundation. Photo credit: CMC.

Pregnant young women being checked out at the Women’s Centre of Jamaica Foundation. Photo credit: CMC.

She said, the adolescent pregnancy rate in 1978 was approximately 31-32 per cent, compared to 18 per cent in 2008, following a research done by the Centre.

“About five years ago we had about 1,500 girls registered in the programme across the island. After that we had 1,402, then 1,400, and then 1,376. Our last count was 1,288. We do not see all the girls…but then we also keep a tab on the girls who do not access the programme and we are really recognizing that the numbers are trending down,” she said.

The Foundation was established in 1978 in response to the high level of adolescent pregnancies in the country at the time. It provides continuing education for adolescent mothers and the return of school age mothers to school.

Dr. Simpson said, the second pregnancy rate among girls who participate in the Centre’s programme has remained below two per cent.

“The girls who come to the women’s centre are less likely to have repeat pregnancies as against those girls who do not come. That’s the reason why we encourage girls to come to this programme of intervention,” she said.

The Executive Director noted that the girls are equipped with skills “to be able to navigate the other issues that confront them, even beyond this pregnancy.

“So, we help them to recognise that they must get up. We will walk beside them and we encourage the parents to do the same and we encourage the wider society to do the same,” she said, adding that the majority of the girls go back to school to complete their education.

Dr. Simpson said  that the Centre has also observed that girls are getting pregnant at a later age, between 16 and 17 years, when they are out of secondary school.

“We really don’t want to see the girls pregnant, so we are happy to see the numbers trending down, but there is a lot more work to be done,” she added.

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