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This chapter presents the related studies and important concepts gleamed for
literature that have had been found useful in the conceptualization of the present study.
These related studies and literature offered assessment and enrichment in the conduct of
Related Literature
The adolescent is faced with many decisions and needs accurate information on
topics such as body changes , sexual activity, emotional responses within intimate sexual
relationships, STD’s, and pregnancy. In the United States 70% of adolescents have had
sexual intercourse by the age of 18 (Kenney et al, 1998). A substantial number of these
teenagers do not protect themselves from pregnancy or STD’s. The dynamics of sexual risk
taking are not fully understood, but numerous studies have found correlations between
drug/alcohol use, sexual abuse, and unsafe sex. (Keller et al. 2001; Kenney et al, 2000).
Adolescents tend to have a sense of being invulnerable, believing that unwanted pregnancy;
STD’s and other negative outcomes of sexual behaviour are not likely to happen to them
Adolescent parents face different barriers. According to Spivak: “it has been
acknowledged that adolescent parents tend to come in high risk families have poor
academic achievement, and lived in our most disadvantaged communities and therefore,
teenager having children who are vulnerable to physical and developmental problems.
Teenage parents face many obstacles to economic and social success, and these
further influence the environment in which their children grow up. Adolescent also
parenting practices, whereas some of these appears highly resistant to change, others have
The “Lack of Parental Guidance Contributes to Teen Pregnancy”, states that most
people evade their children from talking about sex. In some case they provide false
information regarding sex and discourage their children to participate in any informative
discussion about sex. Also teenage mothers are not well educated about sex before getting
pregnant and thus this leads to lack of communication between the parents and their
Consequently, there can be no “one size fits all” conclusion here. But at the same
time, it is possible and useful to describe the average effect of teenage childbearing and
recognizing that the average conceals underlying variation in both directions. Measuring
the socio-economic effects of early childbearing sounds like it ought to be a simple task.
After all, everyone knows that teenage mothers are much worse off on many dimensions
than women who delay childbearing. Their family incomes are lower, they are more likely
to be poor and to be receiving welfare, and they are likely to be married. Additionally, their
children lag on standard measures of early development. But such facts by themselves do
not establish that a teenage birth is the single cause of those problems or what if we could
successfully intervene and change a woman’s age at first birth and nothing else about her
up to that point, we would greatly alter her life circumstances. Early aged pregnancy has
health need to take a life-long perspective and to tackle social disadvantages across the life
socio-economic conditions in childhood translate into higher rates of both mental and
overall ill health adulthood. The poorer mental health of teenage mothers has implications
for the subsequent generation and hence contributes to the intergenerational transmission
of disadvantage.
According to Torvillas (2013) The Philippine Star noted that there is evidence
supporting the Reproductive health law that calls for sexuality education among young
students. Not that for teaching the kids to engage in “safe” sex, but rather, for telling them
why they should not engage in early sex, and yes, before marriage. With regulated sexuality
education, the young are informed about sex, pregnancy, unplanned and planned, instead
of through the internet or pornographic magazines that somehow manage to reach them.
Peep into their rooms and see copies of Playboy and Pent house and other sexy publications
tucked between the bed sheets, and for-adults-only videos in the internet.
The factors that triggers the Teenage pregnancy in the country are: Family
attention, love, caring, lack of moral values, failure to nurture with good principle,
curiosity, lack of information about Sex (sex education), use of illegal drugs, lack of
psychological and social changes are taking place there is no way to predict how particular
youth will behave sexually. Many adolescents at this age explore relationship and fall in
and out of love. They are exploring intimacy, establishing independence from their families
and achieving their own identity they are trying out new ideas and behaviour that they often
In the Philippines, NSO (2013) showed in their data that 13-14 percent of all
registered marriage is among teenagers below 20 years old while data from the National
Youth Commission showed that the rate of teen pregnancy in the country is among the
highest in the ASEAN region and the only country where the rate is increasing. The global
issue of teen pregnancy is the reason why the annual celebration of World Population Day-
July 11- lead by United Nations Population Fund, focuses on addressing teen pregnancy.
Related Studies
Foreign
According to Advocates for Youth, “Adolescent mothers are less likely to complete
their education and are most likely to face limited career and economic opportunities
compared to women whose first child is born after the age of 20. “A child whose mother
has no education is twice as likely to drop out of school then one whose mother is educated
and an estimated one-third of adolescents, who are teen parents, are products of teenage
culture, one that continually respects the myths and ideologist, the facts and patterns of
relationships that define and legitimize the social order. According to the cultivation
hypothesis, a steady dose of television, over time, acts like the pull of gravity toward an
imaged-centre. This pull results in a shared set of conceptions and expectations about
Kinsman et. al (2004) conducted a study that focused on the role of peer norms in
early sexual initiation of sixth-grade students found that those who were sexually initiated
were significantly more likely that others to be older (11.9 years versus 11.6 years), male
(58 percent versus 37 percent), attending a poorer school (87 percent versus 85 percent),
and living in an area with a high proportion of single-parent families (45p percent versus
41 percent).
Giocolea’s (2009) study on risk factors of pregnancy among adolescent girls found
that early sexual debut; non-use of conception during first sexual intercourse, living in a
very poor household, having suffered from sexual abuse during childhood pregnancies,
there is an effect on the economy. The effects of teenage pregnancies on the economy are
TV, found that adolescents who have high levels of exposure to television programs that
contain sexual content are twice as likely to be involved in a pregnancy over the following
asserted that sexual behaviour depends largely on societal constrictions and the level of
determinants through have its role on peoples sexual behaviour, the agents of
Chan’s (2005) study on adolescent sexuality sample of Hong Kong young woman
on the determinants of premarital sex revealed the guidance of parents is still effective in
avoiding such behaviour. They are showed that once a young women begins dating, her
chances of having premarital sex increases, more so when kissing has taken place.
adolescence reflected a stage in the human evolutionary past when there was a great deal
of upheaval and disorder- with the result that adolescents experience a great deal of “storm
and stress” as a standard part of their development. According to Hall the time of storm
and stress is reflected through 2 types of difficulties: conflict with parents, and risk
behaviours. Conflict with parents can be explained by the fact that as a child grows into an
As a result of this, adolescents approach different sources of information such as the media.
Local
Dela Cruz (2002) claimed that catholic high school students were less sexually
active and less likely to have engaged in premarital sex than public high school students.
In college, the religiously non fraternity male students were less likely to have sex than
fraternity students. Similarly, the religiously non-sorority female students were less likely
in engage in sex that sorority student. It is believed that peer pressure may have
the Philippines show that each year, almost 1 million teenage women—10 percent of all
women aged 15-19 and 19 percent of those who have had sexual intercourse—become
pregnant and one-fourth of teenage mothers have a second child within two years of their
first.
While in the Philippines, based on the 2002 Young Adult Fertility and Sexuality
Study by the University of the Philippines Population Institute (UPPI) and the
Teenage pregnancy is not like any other issue there in the whole world although it
seems to be a common concern, it does not seem to bother people that much. Not until they
are personally affected by the issue or until they finally realized that it had been increasing
in number of affected people that it slowly reached an abnormal stage or the point that it
affected too many lives already and too many aspects of living.
Fernandez (2001), who studied about minority adolescents, found that the number
of sexually active girlfriends was positively associated with permissive sexual attitudes,
intentions for future sexual activity and non-marital childbearing. Other risk behaviours
have an impact as well. When a teen’s friends are not attached to school, have poor grades,
abuse drugs or engage in delinquent behaviours, there is a greater likelihood that the teen
will become sexually active at an early age. It is interesting to note that it is not only the
actual behaviour of peers, but the assumption of certain behaviours by peers, that influence
Initially, much of the research on the causes of adolescent sexual activity focused
on the individual level, the influence of the teens’ own physical and psychological
characteristics. More recently there has been growing interest in contextual variables,
aspects of the teens’ environments, such as the community and school. These studies have
consistently found that the community where teens live influences their sexual behaviour.
Adolescents who live in communities with more social disorganization and fewer
economic resources are more likely to engage in sex at an early age and become pregnant.
The level of education, unemployment rate and income level of the adults in the community
are all associated with the sexual behaviour of teens. (Cessane, 2010)
People might say that the pregnancy of these teenagers is just the mere result of the
gratification of sexual urges. That pregnancy would not occur if studies had been
prioritized instead of the relationship of the opposite sex. That if there were no premarital
sex (PMS), there would be no pregnancy. On one simple glance, people judge these
teenagers guilty. “Low Level of Religious Commitment” might pull the teenager to be
pregnant for the teenagers prioritized already their relationship of the opposite sex rather
than abiding the catholic and other religions thrusts to “no premarital sex”. Teenagers who
are busy at church usually listen the advices and warning of parents as the churches thrust
“obey your parents”, which lead the teenagers to be obedient and keep them not pregnant
The National Youth Commission, supported by the Department of Health and the
World Health Organization, convened the 2014 National Summit on Teen Pregnancy last
April 24. This summit, which saw the active participation of adolescent youth, delivered a
clear message: Adolescent sexual and reproductive health (ASRH), or the lack thereof, is
fast becoming the defining issue of this generation of young Filipinos. Without a robust
response from all stakeholders, the Philippines is on track toward a full-blown, national
Staggering facts support this call for concern. Recent (2014) data from the
Philippine Statistical Authority (PSA) reveal that every hour, 24 babies are delivered by
teenage mothers. According to the 2014 Young Adult Fertility and Sexuality (YAFS)
study, around 14 percent of Filipino girls aged 15 to 19 are either pregnant for the first time
or are already mothers—more than twice the rate recorded in 2002. Among six major
economies in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the Philippines has the highest
rate of teenage pregnancies and is the only country where the rate is increasing, per the
University of the Philippines Population Institute, young Filipinos have limited access to
sex education and ASRH services, especially if they are underage and unmarried. Seventy-
eight percent are not using any form of contraception or protection against sexually
transmitted diseases and infections when they are having sex for the first time. While
government programs aim to delay the beginning of childbearing and hasten fertility
Data showed that pregnant teenagers in the Philippines are mostly 17 to 19 years
old. They live with their mothers, parents, or relatives. The father of the child is, in most
cases, a teenage boy. The reasons for becoming pregnant among teenagers include:
unplanned sexual encounters (“getting caught up in the moment”) and peer pressure; lack
of information on safe sex; breakdown of family life and lack of good female role models
pregnant teenagers. However, experts have argued that teenage pregnancy should be
understood as a symptom of dire economic conditions rather than a cause of it. Teenage
pregnancy perpetuates the cycle of poverty and inequality because most pregnant teenagers
have no source of income and face greater financial difficulties later in life. This is because
they drop out of school and are less likely to pursue further education or skills training.
Teenage mothers face critical health risks, including: inadequate nutrition during
pregnancy due to poor eating habits; dangers associated with the reproductive organs not
ready for birth; and maternal death due to higher risk of eclampsia, among others.
Alarmingly, while maternal deaths are decreasing in the Philippines, teenage maternal
deaths are increasing. Ten percent of pregnant teenagers died in the last year, according to
the PSA. Data from the WHO also show a high and increasing incidence of fetal death in
At the end of the teenage pregnancy summit, the participants strongly endorsed a
comprehensive sexual education curriculum; forging a “Batang Ina” social movement; and
Reproductive Health Act was also recognized as an important step to make ASRH services
rights and needs of adolescent girls and boys, including their right to access ASRH
services, must be ensured. In our work in the Philippines, ASRH continues to be a priority
in line with our global “Because I am a Girl” campaign and national Batang Lusog
program.
Samar, where cases of teenage pregnancy are increasing. Youth-Friendly Spaces are being
established to provide peer education and counseling on ASRH and rights. This is
disseminating the right information about the risks and impacts of teenage pregnancy on
the teen mom and the infant. An exploratory study by Plan International on the rising
In the face of numerous challenges that Filipino adolescents face every day—
and their community. When adolescents choose to have sex, they have a right to access not
At the end of the day, when an adolescent, especially a girl, knows her rights, is
empowered to choose, and is heard, she can improve not only her life but also the life of
her immediate and future families. So, maybe it’s time to have this discussion with your
economy, thus the WHO survey extends to our country, and is reflective of what people
see happening here. This alarming rise in teenage pregnancy in Philippines may be
The NSO survey results state that early initiation of sexual activity and early
pregnancy is often seen among women belonging to lower income households. It is also
Others may also claim that societal factors and the media may also play a role in
the rise of teenage pregnancies. Journalist Teddy Locsin Jr. (2014) even blamed the rise of
teenage pregnancy on showbiz. He cited the prominence of sexual themes in television and
movies, day in and day out, and states this as the reason why the desire for physical
contact is ingrained into the minds of the youth. While people we can speculate on the
true reasons behind it, the reality is that teenage pregnancy in Philippines is becoming far
too common. Not only this, but the teenage moms are getting younger as well.
Conceptual Framework