Student soapbox: teenage pregnancies
Paul Greaves queries whether intervention really works
The senior house officer (SHO) covering
the gynaecology clinic that
morning returned to the nurses'
room with an unusual request for advice
from her registrar. After a morning filled
with the usual speculums, pessaries, and
smears, a young girl arrived with her father
complaining of a missed period. Any
attempt to find out how long this had been
going on for was met with a shrug. An
abdominal examination soon revealed the
true extent of the problem - a swelling consistent
with a pregnancy of at least 16 weeks.
"What happened?" There was the same
response - a shrug. "When did you have sex?"
"A couple of months ago." Asking the father
to leave, believing that his presence could be
inhibiting the girl, the SHO asked again.
She'd been raped by "a friend's mate."
Whether or not this was the truth, there was
no doubting the reality of the situation. An
ultrasound scan showed her to be more than
19 weeks pregnant-in three weeks' time
there would be no choice but for her to have
the child. What did she want to do? "Get rid
of it."

PAUL BALDESARE/PHOTOFUSION
There was no choice
Whatever the moral and ethical issues surrounding
abortion under these circumstances,
the tragedy of this situation was
complicated by a telephone call, initially
intended to find a second doctor to approve
the termination. The girl no longer had the
right to choose. The hospital trust would not
undertake social abortions after 16 weeks
and none were carried out on the NHS
after 19 weeks. A private operation would
have set her unemployed, single parent
father back £600. So there was no choice.
Whether she kept the child or had it adopted,
by next spring this 14 year old girl would
be a mother.
I was on the second week of my obstetrics
and gynaecology attachment, and this event
affected me more than anything I had had to
face so far. That week I'd met far more
teenage mums to be, albeit older and more
happily expecting, than I'd ever anticipated.
With numbers of teenage pregnancies on
the increase nationally and a new drive on
tackling teenage pregnancy under way, just
how big is the problem and how effective
can intervention be?
The United Kingdom is the well publicised
leading nation for teenage pregnancies
in Western Europe - 5.2% of teenagers
become pregnant, compared with fewer than
4% in much of Europe.1 Although far lower
than in Eastern Europe or even America,
where rates exceed 10%,2 this still amounts
to almost 100 000 teenagers a year. The case
described is an unusual one, but 7000 under
16 year olds become pregnant each year, 1
and it is for those that the impact on both
mother and child is going to be the most
devastating.
Public health measures had some effect
It has been worse. In 1971 the rate was
almost twice today's figures. 3 After the trends
over the following three decades it has
become clear that public health measures,
though often derided as being ineffectual, do
seem to have some impact. In 1971 the contraceptive
pill was made available to any
woman who required it. Another revolution
in the form of family planning clinics and the
start of contraceptive and sex education
coincided with the legalisation of abortion in
1967. By 1983 the number of teenage mothers
had fallen to its lowest point since the
1950s.3 By 1990, though, the numbers had
crept back up again. What has halted this
decline?
Policymaking in the 1980s reflected a less
forgiving public attitude to abortion and provision
of contraception, with cuts in family
planning clinics and tighter controls on the
availability of terminations. This, combined
with a scare on the safety of the pill in 1983,
coincided with a reversal in the decline in the
pregnancy rate.3 Again, it took a change of
government policy to readdress the problem:
there was increased funding to family
planning clinics and a mandate to schools to
provide sex education. Accordingly, attendance
at clinics and general practice surgeries
rose, and fewer teenagers became
pregnant. And the early 1990s coincided
with awareness of one of the biggest incentives
to start using contraception - AIDS. In
five years the proportion of young people
using condoms at first intercourse doubled.3
So, where are we now? Sadly, teenage
pregnancies are on the increase again. What
is going wrong? It is essential to identify the
reasons in order to understand where intervention
can be effective. Despite the doubts
that this is an area where money and political
time are well spent, public health measures
do have an influence and they are
neglected at a cost. While American style
evangelical preaching about the virtues of
virginity, or the latest £60m government
campaign, "It's OK to be a virgin,"4 may be
ineffectual or simplistic, this does not mean
that the problem is resistant to change. Surely
pumping money into clinics and schools
and raising public awareness is better than
increasing the number of abortions or
unwanted children.
This view may be simplistic and reflect
inexperience in public health policymaking,
but the successes of the past cannot be
ignored. For this 14 year old any further
measures come too late, but further measures
are desperately needed.
Paul Greaves, fourth year medical student, Royal Free and University College Medical School
Email: pgreaves@hotmail.com
studentBMJ 2001;09:217-260 July ISSN 0966-6494
- Scally G. Tackling teenage pregnancy in the UK. Lancet 1999;353:2178.
- Poaneczky M, O'Connor K. Pregnancy in the adolescent patient - screening, diagnosis and initial management. Pediatr Clin North Am 1999;46(4):649-70.
- Wellings K, Kane R. Trends in teenage pregnancy in England and Wales: how can we explain them? J R Soc Med 1999;92:277-82.
- Revill J. It's OK to be a virgin-official. Evening Standard, 9 October 2000:1,3.