Teen pregnancy in NorMin among highest in PH

By Jigger Jerusalem

November 26, 2019, 7:59 pm

<p><strong>TEENAGE PREGNANCY.</strong> Jeremias Gupit, Commission on Population regional director for Northern Mindanao, calls on parents to pay attention to their children to prevent more incidences of teenage pregnancies in the region. During a press conference on Tuesday in Cagayan de Oro, Gupit cited a 2015 study that found Region 10 as having one of the highest teenage pregnancy rates in the country. <em>(PNA photo by Jigger J. Jerusalem)</em></p>

TEENAGE PREGNANCY. Jeremias Gupit, Commission on Population regional director for Northern Mindanao, calls on parents to pay attention to their children to prevent more incidences of teenage pregnancies in the region. During a press conference on Tuesday in Cagayan de Oro, Gupit cited a 2015 study that found Region 10 as having one of the highest teenage pregnancy rates in the country. (PNA photo by Jigger J. Jerusalem)

CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY -- Among the regions in the country, Northern Mindanao (Region 10) ranked second as having the most number of teenage pregnancies, a Commission on Population-10 (Popcom-10) official said Tuesday.

Popcom-10 Director Jeremias Gupit said Northern Mindanao now stands as one of the areas in the country with a high prevalence of teenage pregnancies, based on the findings of a study conducted by the University of the Philippine Population Institute (UPPI) on adolescents and youth in the region.

Gupit noted that the region’s teenage pregnancy has tripled in the span of more than a decade, from 4.6 percent in 2002 to 14.7 percent in 2017.

“This is again confirmed by 2017 National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS), which said that Region 10 is second highest in teenage pregnancy in the Philippines next to Davao Region,” Gupit said.

In 2018, the region’s population was estimated at 4.9 million, with 20 percent of that -- or close to a million -- in their teenage years, said Gupit.

Gupit said that for instance, from January to mid-June this year, there were more than 3,000 babies delivered by teenage mothers, or an average of 24 births per day.

The spike in the number of adolescent pregnancies, Gupit said, can be attributed to the parents’ lack of supervision over their children with electronic gadgets such as cellphones and tablets becoming the youth’s constant companion.

Because of this, today’s young people are exposed to online pornographic materials that they can easily access through their electronic devices, he said.

“The rise of teenage pregnancies is due to the failure of the parents to pay attention to their children,” Gupit told reporters during a press conference in line with the Population and Development Week 2019 held here Tuesday afternoon.

He added that by replacing their personal presence with gadgets, parents are no longer able to monitor their kids leading them to experiment with sex and other things.

In the UPPI study, it was found out that two in five youth in the region have sexual experience, and one in three reads pornographic materials.

Gupit said Northern Mindanao’s number of youth having sex in various ways is higher as compared to the national figure.

For example, 4.5 percent of teenagers have engaged in sex with someone they met online or through text messaging, which is higher than the national figure of 3.7 percent.

Those who have engaged in phone sex in the region (10.1 percent), is the highest in the country, with the entire Philippines only at 5.8 percent; 4.8 percent have engaged in casual sex (Philippines: 4.9 percent); and 5.2 percent had sex with the same sex (Philippines: 4 percent).

Nine out of 10 of Northern Mindanao’s youth’s first premarital sex were unprotected against pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections, the study said.

A Department of Health-10 data also indicated that the total fertility rate in the region remains high at 2.7 in 2017, which still higher than the anticipated replacement fertility level of 2.1.

A replacement fertility level is the level of fertility at which a population exactly replaces itself from one generation to the next.

To address this trend, Gupit challenged parents to develop closeness especially with their adolescent children and provide the attention that no electronic gadget can give. (PNA)

Comments