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Teen Pregnancy
Teenage Pregnancy By: Stephanie Preece The Truth About Teen Pregnancy Although the rate of teenage pregnancy in the United States has declined greatly within the past few years, it is still an enormous problem that needs to be addressed. These rates are still higher in the 1990's than they wer

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The Truth About Teen Pregnancy


Although the rate of teenage pregnancy in the United States has declined greatly


within the past few years, it is still an enormous problem that needs to be addressed.


These rates are still higher in the 1990's than they were only a decade ago. The United


State's teenage birthrate exceeds that of most other industrialized nations, even though


American teenagers are no more sexually active than teenagers are in Canada or Europe.


(Gormly 348)


Recent statistics concerning the teen birthrates are alarming. About 560,000


teenage girls give birth each year. Almost one-sixth of all births in the United States are to


teenage women are to teenage women. Eight in ten of these births resulted from


unintended pregnancies. (Gormly 347) By the age of eighteen, one out of four teenage


girls will have become pregnant. (Newman 679)


Although the onset of pregnancy may occur in any teenager, some teens are at


higher risk for unplanned pregnancy than others. Teenagers who become sexually active


at an earlier age are at a greater risk primarily because young teenagers are less likely to


use birthcontrol. African-American and Hispanic teenagers are twice as likely to give birth


as are white teenagers. Whites are more likely to have abortions. Teenagers who come


from poor neighborhoods and attend segregated schools are at a high risk for pregnancy.


Also, teenagers who are doing poorly in school and have few plans for the future are more


likely to become parents than those who are doing well and have high educationsl and


occupational expectations. Although the rate of teenage pregnancy is higher among low-


income African-Americans and Hispanics, especially those in inner city ghettoes, the


number of births to teenagers is highest among white, nonpoor young women who live in


small cities and towns. (Calhoun 309)


In addition to the question of which teenagers become pregnant, interest is shown


in the social consequences of early parenthood. Adolescent parents (mostly mothers) may


find that they have a "lost or limited opportunity for education." (Johnson 4) The


higher a woman's level of education, the more likely she is to postpone marriage and


childbearing. Adolescents with little schooling are often twice as likely as those with more


education to have a baby bafore their twentieth birthday. Some 58% of young women in


the United States who receive less than a high school education give birth by the time they


are twenty years old, compared with 13% of young women who complete at least twelve


years of schooling. (Tunick 11) Teens who become pregnant during high school are


more likely to drop out. (Calhoun 310) A teen mother leaves school because she cannot


manage the task of caring for a baby and studying, and a teen father usually chooses a job


over school so that he can pay bills and provide for his child. (Johnson 4) Teen mothers


usually have fewer resources than older mothers because they have had less time to gather


savings or build up their "productivity" through work experience, education, or training.


(Planned Parenthood 1) Because of this, teen mothers are generally poor and are


dependent on government support. (Newman 679) The welfare system is usually the


only support a teen parent will receive. Welfare benefits are higher for families with


absent fathers or dependent children. (Calhoun 309) In some cases, teen mothers may


also receive help like Medicaid, Food Stamps, and "Aid to Families with Dependent


Children" (AFDC). (Newman 679)


Besides educational and financial problems, teenage mothers may face a great deal


of emotional strain and may become very stressed. Teen mothers may have limited social


contacts and friendships because they do not have time for anything other than their baby.


Lack of a social life and time for herself may cause the teenage mother to become


depressed or have severe mental anxiety. (Johnson 5) Depression may become worse for


a teenage mother because she usually does not know much about child development or


about how to care for their children. Children who are born to teenage mothers usually


suffer from poor parenting. (Berk 188) Also, children of teenage parents start being


sexually active before their peers and they are more likely to become teenage parents


themselves. These children may also suffer from financial difficulties similar to that of


their parents. "Children whose mothers are age seventeen or younger are three times as


likely as their peers to be poor, and are likely to stay poor for a longer period of time."


(Calhoun 311) The children born to teenage mothers sometimes score lower on


development tests than the children of older mothers. It seems that "rather than declining


over time, educational deficits increase in severity and the children show lower academic


achievement, higher drop out rates, and are more likely to be held back in school."


(Calhoun 310)


Teenage pregnancy comes with not only a child, but also many consequences.


Teen mothers face greater health risks than older mothers, such as anemia, pregnancy


induced hypertension, toxemia, premature delivery, cervical trauma, and even death.


Many of these health risks are due to inadequate prenatal care and support, rather than


physical immaturity. The teenage mother is more likely to be undernourished and suffer


premature and prolonged labor. (Calhoun 311) The death rate from pregnancy


complications are much higher among girls who give birth under age fifteen. (Gormly


347) Poor eating habits, smoking,...

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Berk, Laura E. Child Development. 4th ed. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1997.

Calhoun, C. et al. Sociology. New York: Glencoe-McGraw-Hill, 1995.

Donovan, Patricia. "Falling Teen Pregnancy, Birthrates: What's Behind the Declines?"

The Guttmacher Report. 1.5 (Oct. 1998); 31-34.

Gormly, Anne V. Lifespan Human Development. 6th ed. Fort Worth: Harcourt Brace,

1997.

Johnson, Sherry. Teen Pregnancy: Too Much, Too Soon. Waco, TX: Health Edco.,

1995.

Newman, Philip R. and Barbara M. Newman. Childhood and Adolescence. Pacific

Grove: Brooks/Cole Publishing Co., 1997.

Planned Parenthood Federation of America. "Pregnancy and Childbearing Among U.S.

Teens." Online. Internet. 29 Mar. 1999. Available

http://plannedparenthood.org/Library/teen-pregnancy/childbearing.htm

Tunick, Barbara. "Issues in Brief: Risks and Realities of Early Childbearing Worldwide."

The Guttmacher Report. (Feb. 1997); 10-14.

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