Local News

71 Teenage Pregnancies Recorded at Local Hospital in Just One Month”

TSHOLOTSHO District Hospital has reported 71 cases of teenage pregnancies from girls aged 18 and below in just under a one-month period, with health officials calling for an all-stakeholder approach to address the issue.
Last year, the Constitutional Court ruled that the age of consent be raised from 16 years to 18 years. Tsholotsho District Medical Officer Dr Mbonisi Nyathi revealed that out of a total of 205 deliveries recorded in June, 24 percent were minors. The district was in the limelight last year when a nine-year-old was impregnated by her 13-year-old cousin. Dr Nyathi said early pregnancies were the leading cause of complications in young girls while giving birth.

“In June, 49 (24 percent) deliveries were from girls 18 years and below, 22 (11 percent) of them were all 16 years and below. The previous month, in May, we had a total of 186 deliveries and most of them were under the age of 18, which shows the constant large numbers of young girls who give birth in a month and most of them are juveniles.

Giving birth at a very young age brings out a lot of complications to the mother and the unborn baby, as a result, most under-aged mothers deliver via Caesarean section to try and avoid complications.”

He urged the community to introduce stakeholder engagement and awareness campaigns to help stop young under-age girls from falling pregnant. The Tsholotsho community has over the years raised complaints about how cross-border transport operators take advantage of young girls when they come to visit and leave them pregnant in many cases.

Some schools in Tsholotsho have come up with guidance and counselling sessions that can help children make wise decisions that shape their future positively. Early unintended pregnancies have led to a large number of school dropouts, S_exually

Transmitted Infections, and they can also have negative social and economic effects on girls, their families, and communities.

Zimbabwe is sitting on a 22 percent national teenage pregnancy rate while the latest HIV prevalence rate is at about 11,8 percent, a worrying trend as teenage pregnancy is increasing rapidly, health experts said. Sunday News

Related Articles

Back to top button