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Midwifery: a profession in transition

journal contribution
posted on 2002-01-01, 00:00 authored by Karen Lane
This paper presents the findings of a pilot study carried out in one regional center in Queensland, Australia. The study aimed to develop a snapshot image of teenage mothers. Of the thirty mothers who participated; just over half (16/30; 53%) reported using contraceptives, less than a third (8/30; 27%) used condoms to protect themselves from STDs and the majority (23/30; 77%) said their pregnancy was unplanned. Despite this, 16 (53%) attended prenatal classes, 16 (53%) breast-fed their infants and 27 (90%) were satisfied with motherhood. On average the fathers were almost four years older than the mother were (range 17 to 29 years), most fathers (23/30; 77%) were not teenagers themselves and only 11 (37%) were resident fathers following the birth of the baby. Exploratory analysis suggests that the fathers were significantly older than the teenage mothers were (t=−6.73, df 29, p=0.0001). Although these preliminary results are similar to those reported in the American literature further research is needed to confirm if the findings presented are representative of teenage mothers in Australia. While we await the results of future studies, practitioners are encouraged to continue to educate young women about appropriate and safer sexual practices.

History

Journal

Australian journal of midwifery

Volume

15

Issue

2

Pagination

26 - 31

Publisher

Elsevier Inc.

Location

Adelaide, S. Aust.

ISSN

1445-4386

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2002, Australian College of Midwives Inc.

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