Showing posts with label teenage pregnancy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teenage pregnancy. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 March 2016

School Girls Vow To Abstain From Premarital Sex




A group of adolescent girls in the Ho Municipal area has pledged to abstain from premarital sex to avoid writing the Basic Education Certificate Examinations (BECE) with pregnancies.


The more than 600 basic school pupils made the promise at a two-day capacity building engagement on Adolescent Reproductive Health, Gender-based Violence, Domestic Violence and harmful traditional practices, in Ho.


The event, held under the auspices of the Department of Gender, was funded by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).


Every year, a number of girls in the area either drop out of school due to teenage pregnancies or write their BECEs carrying pregnancies.


A few also take their babies to the examination halls and breastfeed them intermittently with writing the examinations.


Ms Comfort Ablometi, the Volta Regional Director of the Department of Gender, said the Region was leading in teenage pregnancies and urged the girls to keep their promise and become role models.


Madam Vivian Tettevi, the Ho Municipal Public Nursing Officer, said teenage pregnancies exerted social, economic and academic pressures on pupils and students and advised them to abstain from sex.


She said negative traditional practices such as widowhood rites made women psychologically unstable, and so they must cease.


Mr Daniel Carlos Mensah, the Principal Investigator, the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), Volta Region, advised the girls to report those who attempt to force them to enter into early marriages to their teachers, the Police and assembly members.


He also tasked them to report the culprits of defilement, sexual abuse and violence against them to appropriate authorities.




-GNA



School Girls Vow To Abstain From Premarital Sex

Friday, 26 February 2016

Greater Accra records 10,000 teenage pregnancy cases

Teenage pregnancy is still a problem in both urban and rural Ghana. Teenage pregnancy involves girls between the ages of 13 – 19 years of age.


Greater Accra recorded a total 10,000 teenage pregnancy cases in 2015.


This was revealed by the Regional director of Health, Dr. Linda Van Otoo, at the just ended annual health review for the Greater Accra Region.

“The sad thing is that we have children as young as 10 to 14 years also becoming pregnant and though we see a reduction it is still not acceptable,” she stated.




Teenage Pregnancy remains a major concern to health professionals. The canker comes at a time the country is struggling to deal with child marriage.

Dr Linda Van Otoo said her outfit is also seeking to find out what proportion of these teenagers are married.

“That will help in addressing child marriages,” she said.







The Regional director of Health, stressed the need for swift action to deal with the twin problem.


The problem of teenage pregnancy shows a loosening of the moral fiber of our nation Ghana. Churches in Ghana must speak against Fornication and child marriages. In Ghana today, sleeping with your boyfriend has become a normal practice. Parents are pretending not to know and Christians are turning a blind eye to this problem.


Everyone must work together to fight the twin problems of teenage pregnancy and child marriage in Ghana.


 


 




Greater Accra records 10,000 teenage pregnancy cases