Publication | Open Access
Children having children: Outcome of extreme teenage pregnancies (13–15 years)
19
Citations
10
References
2009
Year
FertilityTeenage PregnancyReproductive HealthGynecologyPhysical AbuseFetal OutcomesPediatric TraumaHigh-risk PregnancyAdolescent MedicineCaesarean SectionPrenatal CarePublic HealthTeenage MothersPregnancy PreventionExtreme Teenage PregnanciesMaternal ComplicationPediatric GynecologyEarly Childhood DevelopmentChild AbuseMaternal HealthMidwiferyPerinatal EpidemiologyChild DevelopmentAbortionSexual AbuseChild HealthPediatricsPregnancyPreterm BirthMedicineAdolescent GynecologyTrauma In ChildEmergency Medicine
A case-control study was conducted to compare obstetric and fetal outcomes of teenage mothers <or=15 years (n=35) with those from older teenagers between 16 and 19 years (n=35) and mothers between 20 and 30 years (n = 35) matched for ethnicity and parity. Teenage mothers <or=15 years were significantly more likely to come from single-parent families and twice as likely to have experienced childhood sexual or physical abuse compared to those over 16 years (both p <0.0001). They attended antenatal appointments later than older teenagers (23+/-7 weeks vs. 18+/-7 weeks, p <0.05), had fewer visits (p<0.05), were more likely to undergo emergency cesarean section (25.7% vs. 5.7% vs. 8.6%, p <0.05) and to have a higher rate of perineal trauma (45.7% vs. 20.0% vs. 25.7%, p<0.05). However, all three groups delivered babies of comparable birthweights (3.2+/-0.5 kg vs. 3.1+/-0.7 kg vs. 3.3+/-0.6 kg, p >0.05) at similar gestations (39+/-4 weeks vs. 39+/-2 weeks vs. 39+/-3 weeks, p >0.05).
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