The South Tongu District Health Directorate and the Tongu Council of Chiefs have concerted to taken stringent strides to address the issue of teenage pregnancy, following its escalating rate in the district. Madam Rachelle Elikem Zewu, a Public Health Nurse said the district had recorded staggering statistics, with the first quarter of 2024 already showing a 15.6 per cent rate of teenage girl pregnancy.
She said pregnancy cases rose to 120, which was equivalent to 13.5 per cent in 2023, compared to 100 cases representing 12 per cent recorded in 2022. Previously in 2021, 128 girls aged 10-19 became pregnant, amounting to 14.
3 per cent, she disclosed. Madam Zewu attributed the high incidence to unprotected sexual activities, socio-economic hardships, and migration. She said the situation was further compounded by the prevalence of substance abuse, sexual and gender-based violence, and lack of adolescent-friendly services in communities and schools in South Tongu.
She said the consequences of teenage pregnancy were severe, with many of these girls facing eclampsia, premature births, difficult labor, depression, and sexually transmitted diseases. “This menace does not only harm the young girls but also leads to school dropouts, thereby crippling their future prospects,” she added. Madam Mavis Agumeh, the District Health Director told the Ghana News Agency that her outfit would continue to intensify adolescent health education in public institutions and engage in intensive out.