Teen Pregnancy, By Hadi Danawi, Zenobia Bryant And Tala Hasbini

2078 Words5 Pages

The first article is by Hadi Danawi, Zenobia Bryant and Tala Hasbini and is entitled Targeting Unintended Teen Pregnancy in the U.S.. This article is all about the numbers and statistics. The authors state that we should take the statistics that we know and use those as a jumping off point on where to direct resources. If we know of a community where there is a higher rate of teen pregnancies, then we can go into those communities and inform the teens of the resources available in the area and offer the teens sexual education classes. The authors also suggested that the best way to end teen pregnancy is not to necessarily target the issue directly but we should target differences within our own communities first. The article also examines which individuals may be more apt to have a teen pregnancy verses others.
The second article was written by Guiomar Luciana Danieli, Maria de Lourdes Denardin Budo, Lucia Beatriz Ressel & Margot Agathe Seiffert which is entitled Perceptions About Pregnancy and Health Education Experiences: Perspective of Teen Pregnancy and it is about a study that was conducted. The article first examines why teens tend to engage in sexual activity at such a young age. To gain knowledge about this subject the article contains information about a study that was conducted in southern Brazil. All of the participants of the study were teenagers who were in their first trimester. The study consisted first of an interview with nine open-ended questions and an observation session where the teens posture and attitudes were observed in regards to their pregnancy. For the study 13 teens were used who ranged from 14 to 19. Ultimately the teens displayed happiness, fear, anxiety and insecurity.
The third art...

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...own. Bratsis went onto argue that the reason for the decline could possibly be to public ad campaigns, particularly ones that display the downsides of being a young mother. Bratsis (2015) also argued that 86% of teens claimed that they the last time they had sex they used contraception, namely condoms and birth control (12). The author pointed out that we need to educate teens in the benefits of using long-acting reversible contraception instead of condoms and birth control. Bratsis suggested that we should take away the barriers, increase availability, access and awarenss of this type of contraception because it can prevent pregnancy for three to 10 years depending on which method is used. However, teens do need to be aware that they do not prevent STDs. Bratsis believes that educating teens about this contraception will help reduce the teen pregnancy rate.

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