Alarm as Kenya ranks 3rd highest globally in teen pregnancies, 98 adolescents infected with HIV weekly
New statistics by the Ministry of Health
released on Tuesday show
that, in the last one year, on average, 98 new HIV infections were recorded
every week among adolescents of age 10-19 years.
This, they say has been caused by the triple threat of new HIV infections, gender
and sexual violence and adolescent pregnancies, as Kenya remains the third-highest country worldwide with teenage pregnancies where one in every five
adolescent women aged 15 -19 are already mothers or pregnant with their first
child.
The Ministry of Health says HIV
AND AIDS remain a major public health threat for adolescents and young people.
Numbers by the Ministry and the National
Aids Control Council (NACC) show rising cases of new HIV
infections and adolescent pregnancies.
“Kenya
has the 3rd highest teen pregnancies worldwide where one in every five
adolescents aged 15 -19 are already mothers or pregnant with their first child,” said Health PS Susan Mochache.
In 2017, Kenya
recorded close to 67,000 adolescent pregnancies out of over 317,000
pregnancies. Most of the
adolescent pregnancies were girls aged 10 to 19.
“We
deliver about 12000 women every month and out of this, 10% are mothers between 10-19
years... in the last one year, we
have seen almost 6,000
teen pregnancies in Nairobi and 50% of them end up being HIV positive,” Dr. Ouma Oluga noted.
Nine counties, Nairobi, Kajiado, Homabay, Meru, Kericho,
Narok, Kisii, Mandera and Bomet contributed to 56% of
all teenage pregnancies among adolescents between 10 - 14 years of age.
As the country makes some strides in ending AIDS in
adolescent girls and young women, as a public health threat by 2030, Kenya
still faces a ticking time bomb of the large number of women of child bearing
age, getting infected with HIV.
Adolescents aged 10 -19 account for 53 % of all sexual
gender-based violence cases as of 2021.
Adolescents and young adults aged 15 -29 contribute to 61%
of all new adult HIV infections.
In 2021, Dagoretti North-Sub County
contributed to 15% of all new HIV infections of over 430 adolescents aged 10-19
years in Nairobi County.
Teenage pregnancy remains clear evidence of unprotected sex
that carries other risks beyond pregnancies. More than 1.4 million Kenyans are
living with HIV as of 2021. Children aged 0-4 years accounted for over 78,000 of the infected population, with the vulnerability of adolescent girls and young women attributed to poverty, lack
of education and work opportunities.
Stunned by the shocking situation, the Ministry through the
National Aids Control Council has launched a new countrywide campaign dubbed ‘End the Tripple Threat’ meant to end the three key
issues affecting young and adolescent people.
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