Why preventing unintended pregnancy is critical
- Improving adolescents’ sexual and reproductive health, including preventing unintended pregnancy, is essential to their social and economic well-being.
- Complications of pregnancy and childbirth continue to lead to preventable deaths and ill-health among 15–19-year-old women in developing regions.1
- Adolescent childbearing is associated with lower educational attainment among mothers, and it can perpetuate a cycle of poverty from one generation to the next.1
- Nearly four-fifths of pregnancies among adolescents aged 15–19 in Latin America and the Caribbean are unintended,1 and about half of these end in abortion.2,3 More than three-quarters of these abortions are unsafe.
Adolescents’ need for contraception
- Among the 27.5 million women aged 15–19 in Latin America and the Caribbean, 33% (9.0 million) need contraception because they are married, or are unmarried and sexually active, and do not want a child for at least two years.
- Of these 9.0 million adolescents, 62% (5.6 million) are using modern contraceptives. The most common methods are male condoms and the pill, followed by injectables.
- The other 38% (3.4 million) are not using a modern method; these adolescent women have an unmet need for modern contraception. The vast majority of these women are using no method at all, and the remainder use traditional methods, which are less effective than modern methods.
- Adolescents from lower-income households and those living in rural areas have higher unmet need than do their peers from higher-income households and urban areas. But levels of unmet need are about the same among younger (aged 15–17) and older (aged 18–19) adolescents and regardless of whether they are married or are unmarried and sexually active.1
- Among subregions, unmet need is highest in Central America, where 49% of sexually active adolescents who want to avoid pregnancy are not using modern contraceptives. This proportion is 40% in the Caribbean and 34% in South America.
- In Latin America and the Caribbean, young women often report several reasons for not using contraceptives despite wanting to avoid pregnancy: infrequent sex; not being married; concerns about contraceptive side effects; breast-feeding or not having resumed menstruation after a birth; and their own, their partners’ or others’ opposition to contraception.4
Cost of meeting contraceptive needS
- Based on 2017 estimates, the annual cost of providing contraceptive services to the 5.6 million women aged 15–19 who currently use modern contraceptives in Latin America and the Caribbean is $144 million. This averages to $26 per user annually.
- Service costs include direct costs for contraceptives, related supplies and health worker salaries, as well as the indirect costs of management functions, construction and maintenance of facilities, information and education activities and other types of program support.
- If services were improved for the 5.6 million adolescent women currently using modern contraceptives, costs would increase from $144 million to $153 million. Examples of improvements that would benefit adolescents include better contraceptive counseling and follow-up, consistent availability of a range of modern methods and providers who are trained to work with adolescents.
- If the 3.4 million adolescent women with unmet need were to use the same mix of modern methods as current users and receive improved services, total costs for current and new users would be $243 million each year, an increase of $99 million annually.
- The expanded and improved contraceptive services for all 9.0 million women who need them would cost $27 per user annually. Put differently, the annual cost per capita in Latin America and the Caribbean would be 38 cents.
Benefits of meeting all contraceptive need
- Increased use of modern contraceptives by adolescents wanting to avoid pregnancy would prevent unintended pregnancies, save lives and improve health.
- If all adolescent women who need modern contraceptives were to use them, unintended pregnancies would decrease by 1.6 million per year (58%), and total pregnancies would decrease from 3.5 million per year to 1.9 million per year. This would result in 631,000 fewer unplanned births; 781,000 fewer abortions, more than three-quarters of which would have been unsafe; and 204,000 fewer miscarriages and stillbirths from unintended pregnancies.
- Maternal deaths—those due to complications of pregnancy and childbearing—among women aged 15–19 would drop from the current level of 700 per year5 to 400.
Recommendations
- Meeting adolescent women’s contraceptive needs requires policies and practices to end child marriage, prevent sexual abuse and coercion, increase girls’ education, empower girls and women, and provide comprehensive sexuality education and high-quality contraceptive services.
- Boosting the level of education girls receive increases their ability to make autonomous decisions. Studies show that sexually active adolescents who are in school are more likely than those not in school to use contraceptives.1
- Engaging young men in sexual and reproductive health programs can help bring about more gender-equitable attitudes.
- Adolescents need access to medically accurate and complete sexual and reproductive health information before they are sexually active. This information should be age-, developmentally and culturally appropriate. Policies and programs, including comprehensive sexuality education, should be put in place that address this need.
- The most effective approaches to providing sexual and reproductive health services to youth include a combination of health worker training; facility improvements geared toward welcoming adolescents and protecting their privacy; and information dissemination through schools, communities and the media.1
- The counseling provided with contraceptive methods must be strengthened. All adolescents need correct information about the likelihood of pregnancy, choices of contraceptive methods, information about possible side effects, and support in switching methods when desired.
- Contraceptive services must be provided in a way that protects young women’s rights to voluntary, informed and confidential contraceptive choice.