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In Kenya, reproductive health problems among adolescents derive from practicing early and unsafe sex. The absence or presence of parents can affect the ability of adolescents to protect their sexual health. Research suggests that, in particular, the presence of a father in the home can strongly influence an adolescent's sexual well-being.
Researchers with the African Population and Health Research Center analysed data from a cross-sectional survey of 4 564 Nairobi slum households. Restricting their analysis to a sub-sample of never-married adolescent girls aged 12 to 19, they compared the reproductive health outcomes of those who lived with neither parent, mother only, father only, or both parents.
The researchers assumed that parents influence the reproductive health outcomes of their children through the nature of the parent-child relationship. In the Kenyan context, the father-daughter relationship is assumed to be authoritarian, in which the father prescribes highly disciplined values to the daughter. The relationship between the mother and daughter is assumed to be characterised more by companionship, confidentiality and flexibility.
Using these assumptions the researchers found that:
Higher vulnerability among adolescents living without their father may indicate that fathers are better able to protect their children. Alternatively it may suggest that they chase away pregnant or sexually active daughters, or that economic hardship makes these adolescents more likely to engage in commercial sex. Further policy implications include:
In order to implement effective prevention programmes, it would also be useful to discover whether factors which have been identified as crucial in the development of resilience among adolescents in harsh environments, including warmth, affection and high expectations from parents, influence the variations found in the slums of Nairobi.
Source(s):
‘Parental Presence and Adolescent Reproductive Health among the Nairobi
Poor’, Journal of Adolescent Health 33:369-377, by P. Ngom, M.A. Magadi and T.
Owuor, 2003
Funded by: The Rockefeller Foundation
id21 Research Highlight: 4 March 2004
Further Information:
Pierre Ngom
Family Health International
PO Box 38835
Nairobi
Kenya
Tel:
+254 20 713 911/9
Fax:
+254 20 726 130
Contact the contributor: pngom@fhi.or.ke
African Population and Health Research Center
Other related links:
'Ask your aunty: sex education in rural Uganda'
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'Knowing and doing? HIV awareness and sexual behaviour in South Africa'
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'Misconceptions, denial and folk beliefs - obscuring the risk perceptions
among young Zambians'
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'Who makes the decisions? Men and family planning in Ethiopia'
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See id21's collection of links relevant to sexual and reproductive health.