Adolescent Pregnancy in Australia

Adolescent pregnancy is a major health, social, and economic issue for Australia. Although there has been a downward trend in the number of Australian adolescents giving birth since the 1980s, the rate of Indigenous adolescent pregnancy is declining at a slower rate and is high when compared with th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lewis, Lucy, Skinner, S.
Other Authors: Andrew L Cherry
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Springer 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42044
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author Lewis, Lucy
Skinner, S.
author2 Andrew L Cherry
author_facet Andrew L Cherry
Lewis, Lucy
Skinner, S.
author_sort Lewis, Lucy
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Adolescent pregnancy is a major health, social, and economic issue for Australia. Although there has been a downward trend in the number of Australian adolescents giving birth since the 1980s, the rate of Indigenous adolescent pregnancy is declining at a slower rate and is high when compared with the average rate of Australian adolescent pregnancy. In Australia, adolescent mothers are more likely to be: single, smoke, have high levels of illicit and licit substance use, live in an area of socioeconomic disadvantage, have pregnancies with uncertain dates, have partners at increased risk of exposure to domestic violence and family dysfunction as children, and partners who are often involved with illegal activities especially illicit drugs. Over the last few decades, the median age of first pregnancy has increased significantly but not for non Indigenous girls. When Indigenous adolescents are compared with non Indigenous adolescents, Indigenous girls are more likely to smoke, have anemia, and experience pregnancy-induced hypertension. Providing Indigenous adolescents with culturally appropriate and accessible contraceptive services should be an integral part of this process. This is important in terms of reducing Indigenous adolescent mothers exposure to the increased social inequality associated with adolescent pregnancy.There are a number of maternal risk factors (e.g., smoking and being an Indigenous adolescent) which may precipitate medical and obstetric conditions resulting in adverse birth outcomes such as preterm delivery, low birth weight, and stillbirth. These maternal risk factors may be individual, psychological, or behavioral and identifying the individual pathways of the association between these maternal risk factors and adverse birth outcomes is difficult as they are likely to be multifaceted. Greater understanding of the issues that surround adolescent pregnancy should be a high priority for Australia, especially in terms of evidence to assist with the development of effective intervention programs.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-420442023-02-13T08:01:35Z Adolescent Pregnancy in Australia Lewis, Lucy Skinner, S. Andrew L Cherry Mary E Dillon Sexually transmitted infection Low birth weight Emergency contraceptive pill Illicit and licit drug use Rapid repeat adolescent pregnancy First intercourse Domestic violence Indigenous adolescent Birth outcomes Australian adolescent pregnancy Adolescent pregnancy is a major health, social, and economic issue for Australia. Although there has been a downward trend in the number of Australian adolescents giving birth since the 1980s, the rate of Indigenous adolescent pregnancy is declining at a slower rate and is high when compared with the average rate of Australian adolescent pregnancy. In Australia, adolescent mothers are more likely to be: single, smoke, have high levels of illicit and licit substance use, live in an area of socioeconomic disadvantage, have pregnancies with uncertain dates, have partners at increased risk of exposure to domestic violence and family dysfunction as children, and partners who are often involved with illegal activities especially illicit drugs. Over the last few decades, the median age of first pregnancy has increased significantly but not for non Indigenous girls. When Indigenous adolescents are compared with non Indigenous adolescents, Indigenous girls are more likely to smoke, have anemia, and experience pregnancy-induced hypertension. Providing Indigenous adolescents with culturally appropriate and accessible contraceptive services should be an integral part of this process. This is important in terms of reducing Indigenous adolescent mothers exposure to the increased social inequality associated with adolescent pregnancy.There are a number of maternal risk factors (e.g., smoking and being an Indigenous adolescent) which may precipitate medical and obstetric conditions resulting in adverse birth outcomes such as preterm delivery, low birth weight, and stillbirth. These maternal risk factors may be individual, psychological, or behavioral and identifying the individual pathways of the association between these maternal risk factors and adverse birth outcomes is difficult as they are likely to be multifaceted. Greater understanding of the issues that surround adolescent pregnancy should be a high priority for Australia, especially in terms of evidence to assist with the development of effective intervention programs. 2013 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42044 10.1007/978-1-4899-8026-7_10 Springer restricted
spellingShingle Sexually transmitted infection
Low birth weight
Emergency contraceptive pill
Illicit and licit drug use
Rapid repeat adolescent pregnancy
First intercourse
Domestic violence
Indigenous adolescent
Birth outcomes
Australian adolescent pregnancy
Lewis, Lucy
Skinner, S.
Adolescent Pregnancy in Australia
title Adolescent Pregnancy in Australia
title_full Adolescent Pregnancy in Australia
title_fullStr Adolescent Pregnancy in Australia
title_full_unstemmed Adolescent Pregnancy in Australia
title_short Adolescent Pregnancy in Australia
title_sort adolescent pregnancy in australia
topic Sexually transmitted infection
Low birth weight
Emergency contraceptive pill
Illicit and licit drug use
Rapid repeat adolescent pregnancy
First intercourse
Domestic violence
Indigenous adolescent
Birth outcomes
Australian adolescent pregnancy
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42044