Adolescent Pregnancy
Adolescent Pregnancy
Adolescent Pregnancy
ADOLESCENT PREGNANCY:
Prepared by:
Edilberto Loaiza
Mengjia Liang
UNFPA
New York, 2013
CONTENTS
1.1 Introduction
The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) provides signatory governments and societies in
general with the basic elements for the protection of girls and boys up to the time they reach
adulthood. Any departure from CRC goals and principles constitutes a violation of the rights of the
child, and governments, as duty-bearers, are accountable to respond to these violations. There is
plenty of evidence that in those countries and societies where the rights of the child are honoured
and respected, girls and boys grow up and develop to their potential, and become empowered adults
who can function accordingly. Unfortunately, there is also plenty of evidence of the opposite
tendency, with devastating consequences, especially for girls.
Many children are denied the right to have a name, acquire a nationality and identity, and to be
cared for by her or his parents. Discrimination constantly occurs along the lines of race, colour, sex,
language, religion, disability, etc. Often, children are not able to fully and freely participate in their
societies, or do not receive needed assistance from their governments to develop physically,
mentally, spiritually, morally or socially. The survival and development of children depend
extensively on government and parental provision of a high standard of health, including nutrition;
access to water and sanitation; child care; antenatal, post-natal and preventive care; family
planning; and education on child health, nutrition and hygiene, among other services (UNICEF
2012). Equal opportunity via education is also an undeniable right for children, and yet millions of
girls and boys are out of school (UNESCO 2012). On the protection side, children are affected by
all forms of violence, injury, abuse, neglect and exploitation.
In the CRC, governments agreed that their actions concerning children should be guided by the
principles of non-discrimination; the best interest of the child; the right to life, survival and
development; and respect for their views. States Parties promised to take all effective and
appropriate measures with a view to abolish traditional practices prejudicial to the health of the
children (Article 24.3). Many CRC provisions have been sustained and reinforced under
subsequent treaties and agreements, including the Programme of Action issued by the 1994
International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD). The CRC and ICPD both make
commitments to eliminate harmful traditional practices such as child marriage and child pregnancy.
The ICPD put substantial emphasis on supporting the needs, aspirations and development capacities
of adolescents worldwide, and the elimination of practices that could curtail the normal
development and empowerment of children. On marriage, the Programme of Action urges
governments to enforce laws to ensure that marriage is entered into only with the free and full
consent of the intended spouses(and) laws concerning the minimum legal age of consent and the
minimum age at marriage. (paragraph 4.21). There are also calls for action to encourage
children, adolescents and youth, particularly young women, to continue their education in order to
equip them for a better life, to increase their human potential, to help prevent early marriages and
high-risk child-bearing and to reduce the associated mortality and morbidity (paragraph 6.7[c]).
On adolescents and youth participation, the programme calls for greater and active involvement in
the planning, implementation and evaluation of development activities that have direct effect on
their daily lives, such as information, education and communication activities, and services
concerning reproductive and sexual health, including the prevention of pregnancies before age 18
(paragraphs 6.11 and 6.15).
1
On the reproductive health needs of adolescents, the ICPD agreed on two distinctive objectives:
(a) to address adolescent sexual and reproductive health issues, including unwanted pregnancy,
unsafe abortion, and STIs, including HIV/AIDS, through the promotion of responsible and healthy
reproductive and sexual behavior...and (b) to substantially reduce all adolescent pregnancies
(paragraph 7.44). More specifically, it called for countries and the international community to
...protect and promote the right of adolescents to reproductive health education, information and
care and greatly reduce the number of adolescent pregnancies (paragraph 7.46).
Pregnancies among girls less than 18 years of age have irreparable consequences. It violates the
rights of girls, with life-threatening consequences in terms of sexual and reproductive health, and
poses high development costs for communities, particularly in perpetuating the cycle of poverty.
Existing evidence strongly disputes the rationale of traditional cultural practices such as child
marriage. It supports immediate action to enforce laws protecting the rights of children and
particularly of girls; guarantee education and health needs; and eliminate the risks of violence,
pregnancy among girls less than 18 years of age, HIV infection, and maternal deaths and disability.
This report presents an update on the current situation of pregnancies among girls less than 18 years
of age and adolescents 15-19 years of age; trends during the last 10 years; variations across
geographic, cultural and economic settings; interventions available to minimize pregnancy among
adolescents; evidence for these programmatic approaches; and challenges that nations will have to
deal with in the next 20 years given current population momentum.
Article 1 of the CRC establishes that a child means every human being below the age of
eighteen years unless under the law applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier. Any
pregnancy that occurs to girls before age 18 is therefore considered an adolescent-girl pregnancy in
this report. Pregnancies that occur between ages 10 and 19 in general are referred to as adolescent
pregnancies. The analysis focuses on documented cases of pregnancies among girls before the ages
of 15 and 18 as reported by women aged 20 to 24. 2
1.2 Adolescent-girl pregnancy undermines achievement of the Millennium Development
Goals
With less than three years left to realize the United Nations Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs), governments and their partners should recognize that many of the goals are directly and
negatively affected by the prevalence of adolescent-girl pregnancy. Urgent investments to end this
harmful practice should be part of national strategies for poverty reduction and social justice.
Goal 1: End Hunger and Extreme Poverty
Support for girls to avoid pregnancy, stay in school and delay family formation translates into
greater opportunities for them to develop skills and generate income for themselves and their
present families, building an economic base to lift future generations out of poverty.
Goal 2: Achieve Universal Primary Education
Adolescent pregnancy abruptly limits and ends girls potential because they are taken out of school
to be mothers. Children of mothers with little education are less likely to be educated.
Goal 3: Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women
2
These measurements are retrospective in asking women aged 20 to 24 (who are no longer adolescents, but were at risk of
pregnancies at that time) about pregnancies while they were adolescent girls.
3
Girls often get pregnant without any say in the decision, and often with much older men or
husbands. Large spousal age gaps also mean huge power differentials between girls and their
partners/husbands. Girls who get pregnant before age 18 are more likely to experience violence
within marriage or a partnership than girls who postpone child-bearing.
Goal 4: Reduce Child Mortality
Still births and deaths in the first week of life are 50 per cent higher among babies born to
adolescent mothers than among babies born to mothers in their 20s.3
Goal 5: Improve Maternal Health
Every year, nearly 16 million adolescent girls give birth, the majority of whom are married. These
youngest, first-time mothers face significant risks during pregnancy, including obstetric fistula and
maternal death. Because they start child-bearing early, a married girl will likely have more children
and at shorter intervals during her lifetime. These factorsa young age, multiple children and a
short interval between birthsare all linked to a higher risk of death and disability due to
pregnancy or childbirth.4
Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, Malaria and Other Diseases
Adolescent pregnancy exposes young girls to the risk of HIV and sexually-transmitted infections
(STIs). Girls in a marriage or union often have older, more sexually experienced husbands or
partners, lack the power to negotiate safer sex and have little access to family planning information.
1.3 How is this report organized?
Chapter 2 defines the main indicators for adolescent pregnancy, including some variation for the
proportion of women aged 20 to 24 having a live birth before ages 18 and 15, respectively, and
describes data sources, measurements and limitations. The number of adolescents, that is, the
population between the ages of 10 and 19, has steadily increased in most of the developing world as
a result of declines in mortality and relatively high levels of fertilityin other words, an increasing
number of live births with better chances of survival.
In Chapter 3, the report presents 2010 estimates of the adolescent population at the global, regional
and country levels. It describes expected changes from 2010 to 2030, given current knowledge on
possible shifts in mortality, fertility and migration developed by the United Nations Population
Division in the 2010 publication World Population Prospects. The chapter also includes a
description of the distribution of adolescents between the ages of 15 and 19 according to their
marital status and levels of school participation.
Chapter 4 summarizes empirical evidence of the prevalence and recent trends in adolescent
pregnancy using data from household surveys, mostly the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS),
but also the Multiple Indicators Cluster Surveys (MICS). It illustrates the potential effects of
adolescent pregnancy from 2010 to 2030 if current estimates do not change through actions to
minimize its incidence, and in light of current population momentum. The chapter also delves into
the global population dynamics that have resulted in an increasing number of adolescents.
Chapter 5 looks at disparities in adolescent pregnancy associated with key social and economic
characteristics: place of residence (region and urban/rural), educational attainment and household
wealth (quintiles). The assessment is carried out in a descriptive manner and addresses associations
3
4
between the adolescent birth rate (ABR), defined as the number of live births per 1,000 adolescents
15 to 19 years of age, and the three background characteristics that serve as explanatory variables.
Disaggregating data in this way not only emphasizes the extent and growth of internal disparities
that may easily be overlooked in discussions that address only global, regional or national averages,
but also provides entry points for the development of appropriate policies and programmes to
minimize the incidence of adolescent pregnancies.
Chapter 6 includes a brief description of the extent to which adolescents are making use of
contraception (contraceptive dynamics) as one of the possible interventions to prevent early and
unwanted pregnancies. The evidence is presented using three main indicators: the contraceptive
prevalence rate, the rate of the unmet need for contraception and the proportion of demand satisfied
among adolescents aged 15 to 19. Data is organized to present current levels, trends and
differentials at the global, regional and country levels.
Chapter 7 outlines the future that is already defined in terms of population size and growth, and its
possible influence in terms of the future number of pregnancies among adolescent girls if the
current levels are not modified. Since some knowledge has been accumulated from past efforts to
deal with child marriage and pregnancies among adolescent girls, Chapter 8 draws on this to
propose some possible interventions to advance the elimination of adolescent-girl pregnancy.
Annexes include 10 country profiles for the 5 countries with the highest prevalence of pregnancy
among adolescent girls, and the 5 with the highest absolute number of adolescent girls with a live
birth before age 18.
The percentage of women aged 20 to 24 who married or entered into a union before age 18 in 2010 includes girls born from
1986 to 1990. They probably married or entered into a union from 1995 to 2008.
6
DHS is sponsored by the United States Agency for International Development and MICS by the United Nations Childrens
Fund (UNICEF).
6
For the disparity analysis of ABR, data are available for 79 developing countries, representing 80
per cent of the developing worlds population of women 15 to 19 years of age in 2010. With the
exception of Latin America and the Caribbean, all other regions (sub-Saharan Africa, the Arab
States, East Asia and the Pacific, South Asia, and Eastern Europe and Central Asia) have
information on ABR for countries representing 50 per cent or more of the regions population.7 The
trends analysis of ABR for the period 1998 to 2011 was only possible for 51 developing countries
with two data points.
2.2 Data sources and limitations
Adolescent and adolescent girl pregnancy indicators
A. The prevalence of adolescent-girl pregnancy or AGP (under the age of 18) and adolescent birth
rate or ABR, are calculated with the following two indicators:
1. AGP: Number of women aged 20 to 24 that had a live birth before the ages 15/18 x 100
Total number of women aged 20 to 24
2. ABR: Total number of live births among adolescents (15-19) x 1,000
Total number of adolescents (15-19)
B. The background characteristics of adolescents aged 15-19 used to disaggregate data are defined
as follows:
Place of residence relies on two basic indicators:
region of country of residence
urban or rural residence
The levels of education considered are:
No education
Primary education
Secondary or higher education
Household wealth is measured by quintiles:
Poorest 20 per cent
Second 20 per cent
Middle 20 per cent
Fourth 20 per cent
Richest 20 per cent
Thus, the percentage of women aged 20 to 24 who had a live birth before age 18 among women
aged 20 to 24 without education is a proxy for adolescent-girl pregnancy, since their live birth
occurred before they turned 18 years old.8 The ABR for the poorest quintile is interpreted as the
average number of live births among adolescents aged 15 to 19 from the poorest 20 per cent of
households.
Results are presented using regions defined by UNFPA. They include the Arab States; Asia and the
Pacific (disaggregated into East Asia and the Pacific, and South Asia when possible); Eastern Europe and
Central Asia; Latin America and the Caribbean; sub-Saharan Africa (disaggregated into Eastern and
Southern Africa, and West and Central Africa); and non-UNFPA programme countries. A full description
of the countries in each region appears in Annex 3.
Data for Latin American and the Caribbean cover only 30 per cent of the regions population. China is excluded from East Asia
and the Pacific.
8
Notice, however, that this number may underestimate the real value of child pregnancy, since only pregnancies that ended in a
live birth are counted (excludes stillbirths and abortions).
7
Source: UNFPA database, using United Nations Population Division, 2010 estimates.
From 2010 to 2030, the total population of adolescents will increase to 1.3 billion in spite of forecasted
declines in fertility. Almost 500 million will be adolescent girls aged 10 to 17 (see Figure 3.1). The
number of female adolescents aged 10 to 19 will rise to almost 615 million, representing 15 per cent of
the total female population. While the number of adolescents will increase, they will represent less of the
total population at 15 per cent in 2030, compared to 18 per cent in 2010.
3.2 Global, regional and country-specific trends
In 2010, 55 per cent of the global total of adolescents lived in Asia and the Pacificwith 29 per cent in
South Asia, including India, and 26 per cent in East Asia and the Pacific, including China (see Figure
3.2). Adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa accounted for 16 per cent of the world total, equally divided
between Eastern and Southern Africa, and West and Central Africa. By 2030, the adolescent population
9
of Asia and the Pacific will decline to 48 per cent of the total, while the one in sub-Saharan Africa will
rise to 23 per cent.
Figure 3.2: Distribution of the adolescent population aged 10 to 19 by region, 2010
Source: UNFPA database, using United Nations Population Division, 2010 estimates.
The concentration of adolescent girls aged 10 to 17 will also change significantly, with the largest
increase occurring in sub-Saharan Africa, where adolescent pregnancy is most common, and the rate of
contraceptive use the lowest in the world. The number of adolescent girls there will rise markedly, by 51
per cent, from 75 million in 2010 to 113 million in 2030, and from 18 per cent to 26 per cent of the
adolescent girl population in developing societies (Figure 3.3). This indicates that by 2030, approximately
1 in every 4 adolescent girls will live in sub-Saharan Africa.
In comparison, the number of adolescent girls in East Asia and the Pacific and Latin America and the
Caribbean will fall from 117 million in 2010 to 98 million in 2030 for the former, and from 43 million to
40 million in the latter (Figure 3.3). South Asia will experience a slight increase from 133 million to 136
million.
If current trends continue, by 2030, there will be 26 million more adolescent girls in the world. Most of
them will live in Asia and the Pacific and sub-Saharan Africa, where they will face significantly higher
risks of pregnancy compared to their counterparts in other regions.
Globally, from 2010 to 2030, the number of countries with more than 5 million adolescent girls will
increase from 16 to 18. The number of sub-Saharan African countries with more than 5 million will
double, from 3 to 6. The number of countries with more than 2.5 million will increase from 32 to 44 (Map
3.1).
The largest absolute national increases in adolescent girls will mostly happen in sub-Saharan Africa. The
top five countries with the greatest absolute increases are all sub-Saharan African nations: Nigeria (9.2
million), United Republic of Tanzania (3.7 million), Democratic Republic of the Congo (3.3 million),
Uganda (2.5 million) and Kenya (2.3 million). In percentage terms, 8 of the 9 countries to see an increase
of over 70 per cent in the adolescent girl population are in sub-Saharan Africa: Niger (101 per cent),
Zambia (99 per cent), Malawi (93 per cent), United Republic of Tanzania (90 per cent), Rwanda (78 per
cent), Mali (75 per cent), Uganda (75 per cent) and Burkina Faso (74 per cent).
Figure 3.3: The number of adolescent girls aged 10 to 17 in sub-Saharan Africa will increase from 75 million to 113
million during the period 2010-203010
Source: UNFPA database, using United Nations Population Division, 2010 estimates.
In 2010, 49 per cent of adolescent girls lived in only six countries: China, India, Indonesia, Nigeria,
Pakistan and the United States of America. India (20 per cent) and China (16 per cent) together account
for more than one-third of the global total. India will retain the biggest national adolescent girl population,
with hardly any net change from 2010 to 2030 (93 million to 95 million). China, in contrast, will
experience a sharp decline from 72 million to 55 million. It will only account for 11 per cent of the global
total by 2030 (Figure 3.4).
While East Asia and the Pacific and South Asia will still have the most adolescent girls, the face of this
group will increasingly be African.
10
Calculation is based on 137 UNFPA programme countries with available data. Non-UNFPA programme countries are not
included.
10
Figure 3.4: Top 10 countries with the greatest number (millions) of adolescent girls aged 10 to 17, 2010 and 2030
Source: UNFPA database, using United Nations Population Division, 2010 estimates.
11
Lower-secondary school ages vary, starting between 10 and 13 years of age, and finishing between 14 and 16 years of age. The
lower-secondary school population represents an important part of the adolescent population aged 15 to 19.
11
Table 3.1: Number and percentages of adolescents who are out of school or enrolled in primary education by region,
2007
Out-of-school adolescents of lowerSecondary school age
secondary school age
adolescents in primary school
Percentage
Number Percentage Girls Percentage Number
Girls
of girls
Regions defined by UNESCO
(000)
(000)
(000)
(000)
South and West Asia
29,147
28
16,089
55.2
12,492
12
6,895
Sub-Saharan Africa
21,311
38
11,913
55.9
21,872
39
12,226
10,646
10
5,099
47.9
15,969
15
7,649
Arab States
4,280
18
2,504
58.5
4,280
18
2,504
1,977
949
48.0
9,094
23
4,365
1,946
1,103
56.7
1,112
631
1,334
600
45.0
2,335
1,051
392
234
59.8
98
59
71,033
18
38,492
54.2
67,087
17
35,379
Central Asia
Total
8.7
91.3
1,250
1.7
98.3
253
12.0
88.0
3,183
3.9
96.1
1,053
12.5
87.5
1,891
1.2
98.8
179
15.2
84.8
24,357
3.2
96.8
5,604
5.0
95.0
3,908
1.7
98.3
1,475
24.9
75.1
20,449
4.6
95.4
4,129
Sub-Saharan Africa
23.6
76.4
10,238
2.6
97.4
1,125
19.2
80.8
4,178
3.1
96.9
671
28.0
72.0
6,060
2.1
97.9
454
1.4
98.6
466
0.5
99.5
165
Developing countries
15.8
84.2
40,919
3.0
97.0
8,214
World
14.2
85.8
41,386
2.7
97.3
8,379
Source: UNFPA database, based on United Nations Population Division, 2010 and 2012.
12
Given the negative outcomes associated with child marriage (UNFPA 2012), adolescents who marry,
especially girls, are entering into adulthood in extremely unequal conditions. These same girls are not
attending school and experience high levels of fertility over their lifetimes.
Map 3.1: Changes in the population of adolescent girls aged 10 to 17 by country between 2010 and 2030
2010
2030
Source: UNFPA database, using United Nations Population Division, 2010.
13
Note: Calculations are based on data for 81 countries, representing over 83 per cent of the populations in these regions.
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
Table 4.1 includes the 10 countries with the highest prevalence of pregnancy among adolescent girls in
both relative and absolute terms. While Niger has the highest percentage of women aged 20 to 24 with a
live birth before age 18, at 51 per cent, India in 2010 had the highest total number at 12 million. In
addition to these 10 countries, there are 30 additional countries where the percentage is 20 per cent or
more, a value that is high and unacceptable overall (see also Map 4.1).
In absolute terms, in 2010, 36.4 million women aged 20 to 24 had their first live birth before age 18, and
5.6 million did so before age 15. This value is equivalent to 7.3 million girls under the age of 18 giving
birth every year,13 or 20,000 every day. Of the 36.4 million, almost half or 17.4 million adolescent
mothers lived in South Asia. Sub-Saharan Africa, with the highest prevalence of pregnancies among
12
Similar findings and trends are observed when using the ABR as a proxy for adolescent pregnancy. A more detailed analysis
using the ABR is included in Chapter 5.
13
The 36.5 million value is from 2010, with the live births taking place between approximately 2005 and 2009.
14
adolescent girls, accounted for 28 per cent of adolescent mothers, with 15 per cent in West and Central
Africa, and 13 per cent in Eastern and Southern Africa.
Table 4.1: Ten countries with the highest percentages and the greatest numbers of women aged 20 to 24 who have
had a live birth before age 18, most recent data from surveys since 2000
Top 10 countries with the highest
percentages of women aged 20-24 who gave
birth by 18
Niger
51%
India
11,875,182
Chad
48%
Bangladesh
2,904,220
Mali
46%
Nigeria
1,978,365
Guinea
44%
Brazil
1,354,236
Mozambique
42%
Indonesia
1,078,955
Bangladesh
40%
Pakistan
895,449
Sierra Leone
38%
Ethiopia
881,168
Liberia
38%
DR of the Congo
757,596
38%
585,949
Madagascar
36%
Kenya
535,441
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b). Absolute numbers
were estimated using United Nations Population Division, 2010.
There are 40 countries where 20 per cent or more of women aged 20 to 24 gave birth before age 18 (see
Figure 4.2 and Map 4.1). Of the 15 countries where the figure is over 30 per cent, 14 are in sub-Saharan
Africa, with the highest rates observed in Niger (51 per cent), Chad (48 per cent), Mali (46 per cent),
Guinea (44 per cent), Mozambique (42 per cent), Sierra Leone (38 per cent), Liberia (38 per cent),
Central African Republic (38 per cent), Madagascar (36 per cent), Gabon (35 per cent), Malawi (35 per
cent), Zambia (34 per cent), Uganda (33 per cent) and Cameroon (30 per cent). The only country that has
a rate above 30 per cent outside sub-Saharan Africa is Bangladesh at 40 per cent.
15
Map 4.1: Percentages of women aged 20-24 who gave birth by age 18, by country, most recent data (1996-2011)
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
Figure 4.2: Countries with 20 per cent or more of women aged 20-24 having a live birth before age 18
Colombia
Bolivia
Zimbabwe
Mauritania
Ecuador
Senegal
India
Cape Verde
Swaziland
Ethiopia
Benin
El Salvador
Guatemala
Yemen
Dominican Republic
Sao Tome and Principe
Congo, Democratic Republic of the
Eritrea
Kenya
Honduras
Nigeria
Nicaragua
Burkina Faso
United Republic of Tanzania
Congo, Republic of the
Cameroon
Uganda
Zambia
Malawi
Gabon
Madagascar
Central African Republic
Liberia
Sierra Leone
Bangladesh
Mozambique
Guinea
Mali
Chad
Niger
20
20
21
21
21
22
22
22
22
22
23
24
24
25
25
25
25
25
26
26
28
28
28
28
29
30
33
34
35
35
36
38
38
38
40
42
44
46
48
51
15
25
35
45
55
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
17
exception of Latin America and the Caribbean, appear to be moving towards a decline, although this is
still incipient in some cases.14
Eastern Europe and Central Asia and South Asia have experienced the largest declines at 20 per cent,
followed by East Asia and the Pacific at 13 per cent. Unfortunately, the overall levels in sub-Saharan
Africa, the Arab States, and Latin America and the Caribbean have remained relatively constant, with
changes of less than 10 per cent.
Figure 4.3: Trends in the percentages of women aged 20-24 who gave birth by age 18 and age 15, by UNFPA
regions
Note: Calculations are based on data for 54 countries with two data points available, 1990 to 2008, and 1997 to 2011. The
countries cover over 72 per cent of the populations in the regions above.
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
Despite some progress towards reducing pregnancies among adolescent girls, the disparity between subSaharan Africa, particularly West and Central Africa, and other regions has grown. Among those
countries that conducted surveys during 1990 to 2008, a woman aged 20 to 24 in West and Central Africa
faced a probability of giving birth before age 18 that was 1.1 times as likely as a woman in South Asia,
2.7 times as a woman in the Arab States, and 4 times as a woman in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
Around the second period, 1997 to 2011, these probabilities increased to 1.3 times, 2.9 times and 4.9
times those of South Asia, the Arab States, and Eastern Europe and Central Asia, respectively.
4.3 Country specific trends
Of the 15 countries with a high prevalence of pregnancy among girls less than 18 years of age, or over 30
per cent, only half have seen a reduction (Figure 4.4). All 6 countries with an increased rate are in subSaharan Africa: Madagascar (15 per cent), Liberia (13 per cent), Niger (10 per cent), Chad (6 per cent),
Mali (3 per cent) and Malawi (2 per cent). It is also remarkable to note the decline in prevalence in Cte
dIvoire, which achieved a 54 per cent reduction between 1989 and 2005, from 35 per cent to 16 per cent.
14
These values are affected by sampling errors that may render the differences statistically insignificant. Changes therefore
should be viewed cautiously.
18
Figure 4.4: Of the 15 countries with a high prevalence of pregnancy among girls less than 18 years of age, 8 have
seen reductions
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
b) By background, 1998-2011
Note: Estimates for Figure 5.1(b) are based on data for 79 countries, representing over 80 per cent of the populations in these
regions.
Source: UNFPA estimates based on the MDG database of the United Nations Population Division, and the MDG5b+Info
database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
Overall, the ABR is higher among adolescents in rural areas, with less education or in poor households,
and is lower among adolescents in urban areas, with higher levels of education or in wealthier households.
Adolescents in rural areas, with no education and in the poorest 20 per cent of households have ABRs that
are 1.8, 2.8 and 2.8 times higher than the ones observed for those in urban areas, with a secondary or
higher education, or in the richest 20 per cent of households, respectively.
Similar disparities occur across regions, although with different intensities (see Annex 4 for data
disaggregated by region). East Asia and the Pacific have the largest residence disparity, where adolescents
living in rural areas were 2.3 times as likely to give birth compared to their urban counterparts (69 per
1,000 compared to 31 per 1,000; see Annex 4). The largest disparity by education is in West and Central
Africa, where the ABR for adolescents with no education is 210, versus only 52 among those with
secondary or higher educationa rate about four times higher. Latin America and the Caribbean have the
20
largest wealth disparity. Adolescents in the poorest 20 per cent of households are 4.8 times as likely to
give birth as those in the richest 20 per cent (148 versus 31, respectively).
Figure 5.2 indicates that during the last 20 years, the ABR in the developing world has declined by about
9 per cent. This trend appears across most socioeconomic and demographic groups, as can be seen in
changes by place of residence and wealth quintile (except among the richest 20 per cent, where the rate
seems unchanged).
Figure 5.2: Trends in the ABR according to background characteristics
Note: Calculations based on data for 51 countries with two data points available, for 1990 to 2008 and 1998 to 2011. The
countries cover over 67 per cent of the populations in these regions.
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
Table 5.1 shows that progress in reducing adolescent pregnancy has taken place across all UNFPA
regions, except for the Arab States, and East Asia and the Pacific. The ABR in Eastern Europe and
Central Asia decreased by 24 per cent from 46 to 35, followed by South Asia with a 15 per cent decline
from 109 to 93. West and Central Africa experienced a slower decline of 1.3 per cent, from 131 to 129. In
two regions, East Asia and the Pacific, and the Arab States, the ABR increased, by 12 per cent and 6 per
cent, respectively. Changes have been unequal when considering variations by background
characteristics. There are consistent declines in the second wealth quintile, but in the four other quintiles,
ABR increases are observed in some regions.
21
Table 5.1: Trends in the ABR by region and wealth quintile, percentage changes between two consecutive surveys,
1994 to 2008 and 1998 to 2011
Wealth quintiles
Total
Regions
Poorest
Second
Middle
Fourth
Richest
Eastern Europe and Central Asia
-23.8
52.3
-23.1
-32.0
-49.2
92.1
South Asia
-14.7
0.2
-11.4
-7.6
-20.7
-4.3
Developing countries
-8.8
-10.3
-4.1
-6.0
-3.0
-0.8
-8.3
-5.7
-4.7
-13.0
-4.4
-21.6
-7.8
-8.2
-2.2
-10.8
-13.3
-3.0
-1.3
-0.3
-0.9
-8.0
3.1
-8.7
Arab States
East Asia and the Pacific
5.9
-5.9
-2.9
10.7
16.4
67.4
12.2
-31.8
-10.9
21.2
30.6
62.8
Note: Based on data for 51 countries with 67 per cent of the population of women aged 15 to 19. Results should be interpreted
with caution for regions with data covering less than 50 per cent of this group: Arab States (28 per cent), Eastern Europe and
Central Asia (23 per cent), and Latin America and the Caribbean (27 per cent).
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
22
Currently
married
(%)
8.7
Single/
other
(%)
91.3
Adolescent
Birth Rate
31
Total
demand for
family
planning
(%)
46
12.0
88.0
84
77
51
26
Arab States
12.5
87.5
50
34
21
13
Contraceptive
prevalence
(%)
31
Unmet need
for
contraception
(%)
15
15.2
84.8
80
46
23
23
5.0
95.0
50
53
38
15
South Asia
24.9
75.1
88
45
21
25
23.6
76.4
120
37
13
24
19.2
80.8
112
48
22
26
28.0
72.0
129
30
23
15.8
84.2
85
45
22
23
Sub-Saharan Africa
Developing countries
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b). Estimates for
distribution of girls aged 15 to 19 by marital status are based on United Nations Population Division, 2010 and 2012.
Figure 6.2 suggests that most of the need for contraception among female adolescents aged 15 to 19 who
are currently married is for spacing their children rather than limiting births (18 per cent and 3 per cent for
spacing and limiting, respectively, compared to 12 per cent and 49 per cent, respectively, for women aged
30 to 34). The family planning indicators show that compared to other age groups, adolescents
consistently remain the most vulnerable group in terms of family planning. The use of contraception
among female adolescents is the lowest at 21 per cent, compared to 62 per cent among women aged
23
women 30 to 34. The highest unmet need for family planning is observed among adolescents at 25 per
cent, compared to only 15 per cent among women aged 30 to 34. As a result, about 80 per cent of women
aged 30 to 34 have their family planning demand satisfied, compared to only 46 per cent of adolescents,
the lowest among all age groups.
To minimize the incidence of early pregnancy, policymakers and programme managers need to consider
the contributions of different demographic factors to population growth, as observed in population
projections. Policy options for countries with population growth mainly affected by high levels of
unwanted fertility could be different from those for countries with population growth affected by a young
age structure, for example.
Figure 6.1 shows the decomposition process for Mali and India. In Mali, the removal of the momentum
effect, where the current age structure is due to previous population dynamics, from the effect of
unwanted fertility is 16.7 per cent. By removing unwanted pregnancy from current conditions, the total
population for Mali in 2050 could be reduced from 42.1 million to 35.1 million. One possible policy
option could be meeting contraception needs and strengthening family planning programmes.
By contrast, in India, the impact of high fertility, both wanted and unwanted, on future population growth
is not as important. Growth is instead rather heavily dependent on the current age structure (Figure 6.1).
Momentum from the existing young age structure will be responsible for 33.6 per cent of population
growth from 2010 to 2050. If this effect could be removed, the total expected population for India in 2050
could be reduced by 25.1 per cent. While a young age structure is not amenable to modification, an option
to offset momentum is available that has received little attention in past policy debates: rising the average
age at which women begin child-bearing and encouraging wider spacing between births. Delaying the
onset of child-bearing has the added benefit of significantly improving the well-being of adolescents.1516
Figure 6.1: Alternative population projections for 2005-2050 and population growth components
Bongaarts, 1994.
Bongaarts and Bulatao, 1999.
24
Figure 6.2: Levels of family planning by age group, most recent data
Note: Calculations of percentages are based on 76 UNFPA programme countries with data available.
25
2015
0.6
2020
0.5
2025
0.5
2030
0.5
Arab States
1.5
1.6
1.7
1.9
2.1
4.5
4.6
4.7
4.7
4.6
Sub-Saharan Africa
10.1
11.4
12.9
14.7
16.4
4.7
5.3
6.7
7.4
5.4
6.9
7.9
8.9
19.6
20.1
20.3
20.4
20.6
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.2
17.4
17.9
18.1
18.2
18.4
36.4
38.3
40
42.1
44.1
7.3
7.7
8.0
8.4
8.8
*Excluding China
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b).
The greatest increase in pregnancy among adolescent girls less than 18 years of age over the next 20 years
is likely to happen in sub-Saharan Africa (see Figure 7.1). In West and Central Africa, the number of
pregnancies among adolescent girls less than 18 years of age could increase by 67 per cent, from 5.4
million in 2010 (1.1 million per year) to 8.9 million in 2030 (1.8 million per year). Over the same period,
in Eastern and Southern Africa, the number of adolescent-girls pregnant could increase by 57 per cent,
from 4.7 million (0.9 million per year) to 7.4 million (1.5 million per year).
17
The estimates do not include women who die before age 20, thus they could underestimate the number of women aged 20 to 24
who gave birth before age 18 if the levels of mortality are higher for this group of women than for those giving birth after age 18.
26
South Asia, the region with the highest number of adolescent girls having a child before age 18, would
experience a small increase of 6 per cent, from 17.4 million in 2010 (3.5 million per year) to 18.4 million
in 2030 (3.6 million per year). Although the increase is slight, the absolute number of future adolescent
mothers in South Asia is massive. From 2010 to 2030, a total of 90 million adolescent-girls in South Asia
alone are likely to give birth, accounting for about 45 per cent of the future adolescent mothers in
developing societies over the same period.
Figure 7.1 indicates that trends in the total number of adolescent girls with a live birth before age 18 are
not that different from those for the same girls before age 15. The potential number for sub-Saharan
Africa could eventually equal or surpass the one for South Asia around 2025 to 2030, however, with a
total of 3 million adolescents who could have had their first birth before age 15 (Figure 7.1b). These
results depend on different age structures and the current prevalence of pregnancy among adolescent girls.
Figure 7.1: Number of women (millions) aged 20 to 24 who will give birth before ages 15 and 18 from 2010 to
2030, by UNFPA regions
a) Before age 18
b) Before age 15
Source: UNFPA MDG5b+Info database with data from DHS and MICS studies (www.devinfo.org/mdg5b). Estimates for future
adolescent mothers are based on United Nations Population Division, 2010.
27
adolescents. Through a variety of means, including advocacy and communication, UNFPA draws
attention to girls needs and realities, given the harmful and life-threatening risks they face from
pregnancies before age 18.
In collaboration with communities, UNFPA assists programmes that enable parents, elders, religious and
other leaders to identify the dangers of pregnancies before age 18, promote the rights of girls, and find
community-owned, collective solutions to discourage and eventually end the practice. It also aids the
most marginalized and vulnerable girls in deferring pregnancy by advocating that they stay in school;
supports programmes that build their life skills; helps provide safe spaces to learn, play and make friends;
delivers sexual and reproductive health and HIV information and services; and assists in improving girls
economic and social well-being.
8.3 An agenda for change
Programmes to end pregnancy among adolescent girls (particularly those taken place before the age of
18) have yielded promising results, created momentum, and provided evidence that the right policies and
programmes can make the difference girls need, and to which, by virtue of their rights, they are entitled.
A growing body of evidence suggests that successful efforts reach across sectors to integrate a range of
approaches that address the root causes of pregnancy among adolescents before the age of 18 years, and
simultaneously promote girls human rights.
The evidence, knowledge and experiences to date suggest that priority should be given to actions that
include the following components:
Enact and enforce national legislation that raises the age of marriage to 18 for both girls and
boys.
Legislators and policymakers should review national legislation, as well as customary laws, in light of
international human rights standards. But even strong legislation on child marriage can be poorly
enforced or unevenly applied to the detriment of girls. Greater efforts are needed to raise awareness of
and enforce existing laws at the community level, while fostering a rights culture among members of the
judiciary, legislature and the police to protect girls from child marriage and uphold their rights overall.
Birth and marriage registration systems should be strengthened to support the enforcement of child
marriage laws.
More broadly, strengthening and implementing laws on child marriage should be part of a national action
plan, which should be a wide-ranging, systematic effort to move towards gender equality in practice as
well as under the law, remove the impediments to womens empowerment and promote their human
rights.
The CEDAW19 and CRC committees20 have a critical role to play by asserting pressure on individual
governments to enforce laws prohibiting child marriage in line with international norms, and to address
19
The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women is the body of independent experts that monitors implementation of the
Convention to Eliminate All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). The Committee consists of 23 experts on womens rights from
around the world. States Parties to the Convention are obliged to submit regular reports to the Committee on measures to uphold rights specified
in CEDAW. On 6 October 1999, the CEDAW Optional Protocol was adopted, which allows the Committee to receive complaints from individual
persons alleging violations of their rights under CEDAW (www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/cedaw/index.htm).
20
The Committee on the Rights of the Child is the body of independent experts that monitors implementation of the CRC. All States Parties are
obliged to submit regular reports, initially two years after acceding to the Convention, and every five years after that, on measures to uphold
rights specified in it. Through two optional protocols, individual persons can submit complaints alleging violations of rights under the
Convention. A third optional protocol is expected to allow individual children to submit complaints
(www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/crc/index.htm).
29
the root causes of girls disadvantaged status compared to boys. More generally, governments should
promote policies of zero tolerance towards all forms of violence against women and girls, including
harmful practices such as child marriage.
Use data to identify and target geographic hotspotsareas with high proportions and
numbers of girls at risk of child marriage and pregnancy before the age of 18.
Despite a range of efforts, child marriage and pregnancy rates before age 18 have not changed
significantly for the poorest and least educated girls, and those who live in rural areas. Policymakers and
programme managers should utilize available DHS, MICS and/or census data to identify administrative
and/or geographic units (e.g. district or constituency/municipality) with concentrations of girls at risk of
child marriage and pregnancy, in terms of either high proportions or absolute numbers.
In addition to looking at lower geographic/administrative units where marriages and pregnancies of girls
before age 18 are prevalent, programme designers and managers should identify whether these same units
also have low levels of satisfied demand for family planning among adolescents; large age differences
between girls and their partners; high proportions of adolescents experiencing violence; and other
indicators of vulnerability. Those units showing multiple levels of risk for girls should be prioritized, and
would benefit from political and financial commitments, and corresponding actions to end child marriages
and pregnancies.
Table 8.1 uses DHS data to illustrate the issues for vulnerable groups of adolescent girls in Bolivia,
Burkina Faso, India and Niger. In all four countries, adolescent girls married to men older than them by
five or more years tend to have a higher probability of having their first live birth before their 18th
birthday. The rate is 60 per cent in Niger, compared to 40 per cent among couples in which ages are
closer, a pattern similar across the other three countries.
Table 8.1: Percentage of women 20-24 with first live birth before age 18 by selected characteristics
Niger
Burkina Faso
India
Selected Characteristics
(DHS-2006)
(DHS-2010)
(DHS-2005/06)
Age difference between wife and husband
Wife older or 0-4 years younger
40
22
22
Bolivia
(DHS-2008)
30
60
34
32
42
59
39
39
46
No
54
32
25
23
Yes
32
20
11
Ethnic/Indigenous/Caste/Tribe #1
56
43
31
28
Ethnic/Indigenous/Caste/Tribe #2
55
31
27
23
Ethnic/Indigenous/Caste/Tribe #3
37
23
23
20
Ethnic/Indigenous/Caste/Tribe #4
--
23
14
16
51
28
22
20
Ethnicity/Indigenous/Caste/Tribe*
Total
Early child-bearing among girls can also be addressed by analysing and understanding higher levels
among specific ethnic/indigenous/caste/tribal groups. In Bolivia, for example, early child-bearing is more
common among Guarani girls (28 per cent) than among their Aymara counterparts (16 per cent). In Niger,
56 per cent of Houssa girls have had a live birth before age 18, compared to 37 per cent of girls in the
other group category.
Data also suggest that rates of pregnancy among girls under age 15 are declining in some countries, while
the prevalence of pregnancy before age 18 has remained roughly constant. This suggests that girls today
may be able to avoid pregnancy during their early adolescence, but that the pressure is still strong to be
mothers before 18. More follow-up studies are needed to understand this phenomenon and other issues
surrounding the timing of pregnancies, including the protective factors associated with the avoidance of
pregnancy before 15. That said, pregnancy before age 15 is still commonplace in many areas within highprevalence countries. Such hotspots should receive the bulk of policy and programmatic resources
aimed at making pregnancy later, safer and fully consensual.
A significant part of these resources should be devoted to improving the sexual and reproductive health of
adolescents, including married girls. Universal access to sexual and reproductive health information and
services is a human right. Given the scale of unsatisfied demand for contraception, it will also contribute
to curbing population growth in high-fertility countries.
Expand prevention programmes that empower girls at risk of early pregnancy and address the
root causes underlying the practice.
Programmes aimed at preventing child marriage and pregnancy should employ a variety of key strategies.
The more successful ones often combine interventions into an integrated and multisectoral response
targeted at girls and their families. These programmes should improve access to and the quality of formal
education for girls, especially at the post-primary and secondary levels; build up girls economic, health
and social assets through the safe spaces model; address underlying economic motivations; seek to change
social norms that undervalue girls; and reduce the social pressures on families to marry off their girls at
early ages. Timing is the key. These interventions, especially schooling and asset-building for girls,
should be directed to very young adolescents in the crucial age range of 10 to 14 in order to counter
pressures on girls to marry and bear children for social and economic security. Even in a short amount of
time, such programmes have yielded demonstrable results at the community level. Policymakers and
programme managers can adapt these models to new settings, monitor and evaluate them for feasibility
and impact, and take them to scale.
Policymakers and programme managers should also leverage new opportunities offered by larger scale
efforts in other sectors, especially education (for example, policies and programmes that offer incentives
to keep girls in school at the secondary level, improve the quality of schooling and teach comprehensive
sexuality education); health (sexual and reproductive health programmes, including maternal health,
family planning, and HIV-related services targeting the most marginalized and vulnerable girls); and
poverty reduction (such as life skills, vocational training and livelihood programmes directed to
adolescent girls). Strong coordination across these different sectors will be needed to promote greater
synergy and maximize impacts.
A lack of comprehensive knowledge of HIV/AIDS is highly correlated with early adolescent childbearing. Girls without this knowledge are more likely to have their first live birth before age 18. In India
(Table 8.1), 25 per cent of girls with no comprehensive knowledge have their first live birth before age
18, compared to only 8 per cent of those with the appropriate knowledge.
31
21
Santhya, 2011.
32
8.4 Conclusion
This report describes the costs and consequences of pregnancy before age 18. The data affirm that
adolescent pregnancy is first and foremost a threat to girls and a breach of their fundamental human rights
to education, health, life opportunities, and, indeed, to life itself. For the sake of the more than 75 million
girls at risk over the next decade, it is high time to end adolescent girl pregnancy.
This report reveals that globally, the prevalence of pregnancy among girls before age 18 have not altered
much in the recent past, however. Across continents and the regions of the developing world, pregnancy
among girls before age 18 occurs at high rates, with the gravest consequences for those who are the
poorest, least educated, and living in rural and isolated areas. There is evidence of some small shifts in
prevalence in a handful of countries, in a few areas, and for some age groups, notably girls under 15. But
the pace and reach of change is neither fast nor far enough.
Even beyond the human suffering involved, the world can ill afford to squander the well-being, talents
and contributions of the 20,000 girls who had their first live birth before age 18 each day. It is time to
understand that the costs of inaction extend far beyond the price paid by girls themselves. They include
rights unrealized, foreshortened personal potential and lost development opportunities, and they far
outweigh the costs of interventions. It is time to end adolescent pregnancy for the sake of girls, families,
communities and countries.
Promising interventions and strategic policy choices are available to avert the human tragedy of
pregnancy among girls before age 18 and put girls instead on a path towards prosperity, progress and
peace. Investments targeting support for girls who are married or in a union, and interventions that reduce
vulnerability to early pregnancy for the poorest, least-educated, and rural or isolated girls are investments
in social justice and human rights, producing benefits for individuals, their families and generations to
come. Such investments are a sure and certain means by which to turn the tides of gender inequality,
illiteracy, adolescent pregnancies, and associated rates of maternal mortality and morbidity. In todays
demographic realities, reducing child marriage, delaying pregnancies and securing the rights of young
women to education can also help offset population momentum.
Bringing an end to child marriage and pregnancy before age 18, therefore, is a matter of national priorities
and political will. It requires effective legal frameworks that protect the rights of the children involved,
and enforcement of laws in compliance with human rights standards. It calls for the engagement and
support of families and communities who, when they stand up for their daughters and granddaughters,
will begin to change longstanding but harmful social norms and traditions. Most of all, it depends on the
empowerment of girls themselves, so they are positioned to exercise free and informed consent, and can
make decisions at the right time that will safeguard their own futures, transform their own lives and
enable them to live with the dignity to which they, as human beings, are entitled.
33
INDICATOR DEFINITIONS
Total Female Population (000)
Adolescent birth rate measures the annual number of births to women 15-19
years of age per 1,000 women in that age group. It represents the risk of
childbearing among adolescent women 15 to 19 years of age. It is also
referred to as the age-specific fertility rate for women aged 15-19.
Percentage of women 15-19 years old married or in union currently using
contraception.
Percentage of women 15-19 years old married or in union currently with
unmet need for contraception. They expressed a desire to control their fertility
but were not using contraception.
Percentage of women 15-19 years old married or in union currently have a
demand for family planning. It obtained as TD=CPR+UNR
Percentage of the total demand for contraception that is satisfied. It is
obtained as PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
The percentage and number of women age 20-24 gave birth before reaching
age 18.
ABBREVIATIONS
CEDAW
CRC
DHS
MICS
STI
UNESCO
UNFPA
UNICEF
WPP
34
REFERENCES
Bongaarts, J. 1994. Population policy options in the developing world. Science 263(5148): 771-776.
Bongaarts, J., and R. Bulatao. 1999. Completing the demographic transition. Population and
Development Review 25(3): 515-529.
International Conference on Population and Development Programme of Action. Website:
www.unfpa.org/public/icpd/. Accessed August 2012.
Niger DHS 2006. 2011. Calverton, Maryland: ICF International Calverton.
Santhya, K. G. 2011. Early Marriage and Sexual and Reproductive Health Vulnerability of Young
Women: a Synthesis of Recent Evidence from Developing Countries. Current Opinion in Obstetrics and
Gynecology, 23: 334-339
UNESCO. 2012. EFA Global Monitoring Report 2012: Youth and Skills, putting education to work.
UNESCO Institute for Statistics. 2010. Out-of-School Adolescents. Montreal, Canada.
UNFPA. 2007. Giving Girls Today and Tomorrow: Breaking the cycle of adolescent pregnancy. New
York: UNFPA.
UNFPA. 2012. Marrying Too Young: End child marriage. New York: UNFPA.
UNFPA and UNICEF. 2010. Womens & Childrens Rights: Making the Connection. Available at
http://www.unfpa.org/webdav/site/global/shared/documents/publications/2011/WomenChildren_final.pdf.
UNICEF. 2012. Progress for Children: A report card on adolescents. New
York: UNICEF.
United Nations Population Division. 2010. World Population Prospects.
United Nations Population Division. 2012. World Marriage Data 2012.
World Health Organization. 2008. Fact sheet on maternal mortality. Geneva: WHO. Website:
www.fwrsmi.org.fj/pdf/actsheet-maternal_mortality.odf.
35
Colombia
Comoros
Congo,
Democratic
Republic of the
Before age
18
Before age
15
Total
Urban
Rural
No
education
Primary
Secondary
or higher
Poorest
Second
Middle
Fourth
Richest
Source
2.5
1.5
4.3
40
16.8
23.2
0.1
0
0.2
8.8
2.1
4.8
16.9
4.4
190.9
27.8
33.3
118.3
112
10.1
4.7
126.4
17.9
20.1
91.3
71
21.5
4.1
238.4
42.2
49.1
128.5
145
254.2
284.8
31.5
188.3
176
32.6
200.8
77
145.9
90
5.6
61.1
33.8
116.4
30
17.8
248.6
50.1
35
170.8
176
13.6
243.4
30.7
58.3
134.9
155
36.1
252.3
23.4
36.4
122.5
140
12
197.2
20.2
28.1
98.4
102
4.2
116.1
12.1
9.1
83.9
38
2009 DHS
15.3
1.2
59
30
77
113
70
29
112
95
97
36
10
2010 MICS
20
16
1.8
1.8
87.6
-
67.2
-
131.6
-
279.7
-
176.2
-
62.2
-
181
-
116.1
-
95.7
-
65.1
-
31.6
-
2008 DHS
1996 DHS
28.2
2.4
130.1
68.9
160.5
169.6
106.6
31.1
160
176.6
172.6
133
62.3
2010 DHS
11
6.7
29.9
22.1
1.1
0.3
6.4
0.7
65.2
46.1
126.7
90
57.6
26
88.7
80
66.3
52.3
174.7
102
108
84.5
238.5
-
56
71
182.6
-
24.2
29.6
78.9
-
68.3
92.3
201.8
-
76.4
45.8
173.3
-
68.8
45.3
145.6
-
60.7
39.1
96.3
-
52.7
27.1
65.7
-
2010 DHS
2010 DHS
2011 DHS
2005 DHS
37.7
5.7
1994-95 DHS
48
12.4
203.4
170.9
216.2
223.7
203.2
146.8
216.3
218.1
233.9
196.1
164.1
2004
DHS/2010
MICS
19.7
17
2.3
2.6
83.5
-
72.9
-
122.1
-
275.6
-
211.9
-
78.7
-
141
-
113.8
-
78
-
59.2
-
28.8
-
2010 DHS
1996 DHS
25.1
4.3
135
105
153
188
198
63
91
163
166
206
71
2010 MICS
2006 MICS
2011 DHS
2010 DHS
2006 DHS
2011 DHS
2011 MICS
2006 DHS
36
2005 DHS/
2011-12 DHS
Congo,
Republic of the
Cte d'Ivoire
29.2
3.9
147
125
204
16.1
3.1
127
82
169
168
116
39
225
147
191
115
52
2005 AIS/
1998-99 DHS
Cuba
9.4
0.1
2010 MICS
Dominican
Republic
24.8
92.4
82.7
117.1
242.1
173.9
66.5
171.8
124.4
84.7
63.4
39.1
2007 DHS
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
21
6.5
1.8
0.6
100
50.5
87
32.1
119
63.9
281
117.8
173
75
65.7
49.4
145
67.1
129
60
94
55.5
64
42
38
24.4
2004 RHS
2008 DHS
24.4
2.2
89
73
108
2002-03 RHS/
2008 RHS
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Gabon
Georgia
Ghana
Guatemala
25.4
22.2
35.4
15.8
4.9
3
6.7
2.2
77
79.3
141.7
48
66
51
27.1
127.2
37
49
97
99.5
214.2
63
82
120
163.8
183.6
150
76
61.6
200.6
124
35
19
113.7
39
66
117.7
110
100
123
83
107
99.4
89
81
61.7
53
37
33.1
14
2002 DHS
2011 DHS
2000 DHS
2005 RHS
2008 DHS
24.4
2.6
98
78
114
2002 RHS/
2008 RHS
Guinea
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
India
44.1
15.9
15
26.1
8.7
1.9
2.3
2.8
154
101.3
68.1
101.8
104
49.6
50.3
79.4
187
122.5
85.5
129.2
196
282.1
152.7
184.7
127
213.5
86
149.6
56
89.7
40.6
49.3
197
221.9
110.4
155.6
217
111.8
81.5
129
171
104.2
81.7
120.5
125
46.8
66
84.3
101
32.1
33.9
49.5
2005 DHS
2009 DHS
2006 DHS
2006 DHS
21.7
3.4
90
57
105
163
112
55
134
122
98
72
33
2005-2006
DHS
Indonesia
Iraq
10.1
1.3
51
25.8
73.8
86.2
97.6
34.6
49.4
49.7
71.2
62.8
52.2
2007 DHS
11.8
0.9
68
64
70
89
86
36
2011 MICS/
2006 MICS
Jordan
Kazakhstan
3.5
2.3
25.9
0.1
0.1
4.5
32.4
23.4
103
33.7
17.1
92.2
23.7
31.5
106.5
73.5
207.6
50.3
127.7
48.4
53.8
37.9
26.3
153.8
47.1
33.6
113
40.7
18
74.5
27.8
18
102.9
9.1
21.9
84.5
2009 DHS
2011 MICS
4.2
1997 DHS
13.2
37.8
35.9
34.7
1.4
46.3
0.8
7.2
7.9
4.8
0
9.9
96.5
176.9
147.7
151.9
10.5
188
64.1
135.9
73.8
108.7
5.9
141
109.6
240.3
164.4
162.4
12.3
219
302.4
272.1
267.3
238.9
26
220
138.1
175.5
173.8
177.6
33.1
182
72.6
129.1
66.7
78.8
9.1
78
146.9
239
241.3
187.3
11.3
229
127.8
212.9
202.8
190.6
11.8
206
101.3
236.5
167.3
172.2
13.3
228
69.8
162.7
105.1
137.6
6.1
199
66.2
98.4
58.9
90.5
7.9
127
2009 DHS
2009 MIS
2009 DHS
2010 DHS
2009 DHS
2006 DHS
Kenya
Kyrgyz
Republic
Lesotho
Liberia
Madagascar
Malawi
Maldives
Mali
2009 DHS
37
20.9
7.5
7.5
0.6
32.4
24.4
43.3
62.6
31.8
9.6
50.7
35.7
44.3
21
12.5
2000-01 DHS
42.1
9.8
194.4
174.3
208.1
238
215.6
105.9
222.8
253.2
209.4
191.9
129.5
2003 DHS/
2008 MICS
Namibia
Nepal
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Pakistan
Paraguay
17
19.4
28.1
50.9
27.7
10.2
2.3
1.4
4.4
9.4
6.5
1.3
78
81
119.2
199
121
51.1
58
42.5
98.8
118
70
39.2
92
87.4
153
222
148
58.1
230
176.1
215.3
223
247
86.8
141
129.7
170.5
158
165
51.5
58
52.8
77.9
51
45
23
104
103.1
223
205
79.5
86
105.3
208
180
67.3
102
95.3
223
120
52.1
64
72.1
223
86
41.3
39
31.5
134
27
26.7
2006 DHS
2011 DHS
2001 DHS
2006 DHS
2008 DHS
2007 DHS
13.2
0.8
63
47
85
2004 RHS/
2008 RHS
Peru
Philippines
Republic of
Moldova
14.4
7.1
1.4
0.5
61.3
54.3
46
42.4
103.7
70.8
176
144.4
147.2
108.9
53.9
51.1
156.4
113.8
94.3
80.6
73.6
51.8
44.4
42.9
22.3
20.9
2008 DHS
2008 DHS
4.8
0.1
33.6
26.1
39.1
219.3
340.3
37.1
50.1
59.3
40
18.2
13
2005 DHS
Russian
Federation
2.7
29
23
49
42
33
31
18
19
2011 RHS
Rwanda
Samoa
Sao Tome and
Principe
5.2
-
0.3
-
41
44
40
30
41.2
48
116
-
45.2
-
18.7
-
69.4
-
43
-
32.9
-
41.5
-
26.8
-
2010 DHS
2009 DHS
25.1
1.3
93.5
68.2
122.5
45.5
154.1
49.1
159.5
132.7
107.3
71.5
30
2009 DHS
Senegal
21.5
5.7
92.7
59.6
125.1
142.6
91.8
26.7
179.8
114.5
76.9
75.2
45.5
2010-11 DHS
Serbia
3.3
23.9
6.7
47.2
107.8
16
21.2
4.7
2010 MICS
Sierra Leone
38.1
13.6
122
98
138
163
134
94
146
111
154
138
82
2010 MICS
123
102
140
136.9
97
30
118
145
149
128
83
2006 MICS
15
1.1
76
56
99
105
113
69
108
109
66
68
22
2003 DHS/
1998 DHS
Swaziland
22.1
89
79
91
277
138
77.3
124
87
95
93
51
2010 MICS
Tajikistan
Timor-Leste
Togo
8.8
17.3
6.9
0.7
2.8
0.7
54
51.4
88
35
52
35.2
76
32
54
57.4
99
47
74.2
167
-
99.9
126
-
35.1
49
-
59.8
98
-
51
137
-
74.1
78
-
48.1
101
-
29.7
56
-
2011 DHS
1.8
0.1
30
36
26
2000 DHS
33
3.2
6.6
0
134.5
24.2
91.3
15.7
146.2
43.2
198.8
-
167.6
-
78.3
-
185.8
48.5
184.1
28.5
159.6
19.9
108.3
15.3
77.2
17
2011 DHS
2007 DHS
Mauritania
Morocco
Mozambique
Somalia
South Africa
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Uganda
Ukraine
2004 DHS
2010 DHS
2010 MICS
2008 DHS
38
Uzbekistan
United
Republic of
Tanzania
Viet Nam
2.6
1996 DHS
28.3
3.3
116.2
71
136
231.7
140.3
31.4
177.6
159.1
125.1
108.9
56.8
2010 DHS
0.2
46
15
59
126
171
38.1
95
56
28
39
15
2011 MICS
Yemen
24.6
80
66
86
128
57
49
129
81
70
75
55
1997 DHS/
2006 MICS
Zambia
Zimbabwe
33.6
20.5
4
1.2
146
114.6
99
71.5
189
143.9
239
225.2
198
187.5
88
95.6
215
176.4
174
138.5
193
143
153
110.6
63
48.7
2010-11 DHS
2007 DHS
39
Table 2: Distribution of currently married adolescents aged 15-19 by marital status, and, among those currently married, contraceptive prevalence rate, rate of
unmet need for contraception, total demand for family planning and proportion of satisfied contraceptive demand
Girls
Country or
territory
Boys
Contraceptive
prevalence rate
(percentage)
Family planning
Unmet need
Total demand
for family
for family
planning
planning
(percentage)
(percentage)
Proportion of
demand
satisfied
(percentage)
Currently
married
(percentage)
Single/other
(percentage)
Currently
married
(percentage)
Single/other
(percentage)
7
7.9
8.2
44.7
21.7
13.5
13.4
3.9
31.5
8.6
10.2
24.2
39.1
93
92.1
91.8
55.3
78.3
86.5
86.6
96.1
68.5
91.4
89.8
75.8
60.9
1.9
1
0.3
2.1
1.5
4.9
3.6
1
1.6
1.4
1.6
1.8
5.6
98.1
99
99.7
97.9
98.5
95.1
96.4
99
98.4
98.6
98.4
98.2
94.4
54.7
19.1
6.4
47.1
7.9
30.2
40.9
54.1
6.6
10.1
27.1
16.1
12.5
16.6
27
16.4
17
26.6
27.4
37.9
25.5
21.7
18.8
16
25.7
18.4
71.3
46.1
22.8
64.1
34.5
57.6
78.8
79.6
28.3
28.9
43.1
41.8
30.9
76.7
41.4
28.1
73.5
22.9
52.4
51.9
68.0
23.3
34.9
62.9
38.5
40.5
2008-09 DHS
2010 DHS
2006 DHS
2011 DHS
2006 DHS
2010 MICS
2008 DHS
1996 DHS
2010 DHS
2010 DHS
2010 DHS
2011 DHS
1994-95 DHS
42
14.6
10.2
22.5
58
85.4
89.8
77.5
0.9
3.7
2
3.9
99.1
96.3
98
96.1
4.8
60.5
10.5
13
25.1
23.7
50
26.1
29.9
84.2
60.5
39.1
16.1
71.9
17.4
33.2
2010 MICS
2010 DHS
1996 DHS
2010 MICS
16.4
83.6
2.7
97.3
37.2
30.3
67.5
55.1
2005 DHS
23.9
21
18.9
76.1
79
81.1
1.3
5
2.8
98.7
95
97.2
10.7
67
45.8
24
11.2
27.2
34.7
78.2
73
30.8
85.7
62.7
1998-99 DHS
2011 MICS
2007 DHS
11.4
32.5
19.1
18.1
88.6
67.5
80.9
81.9
0.7
1.4
2.2
2
99.3
98.6
97.8
98
23.4
2.4
23.8
40.1
7
43.6
32.8
29.1
30.4
46
56.6
69.2
77.0
5.2
42.0
57.9
2008 DHS
2002 DHS
2011 DHS
2000 DHS
Source
15-19
Albania
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Bangladesh
Benin
Bhutan
Bolivia
Brazil
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Central
African
Republic
Chad
Colombia
Comoros
Congo,
Democratic
Republic of the
Congo,
Republic of the
Cte d'Ivoire
Cuba
Dominican
Republic
Egypt
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Gabon
40
Ghana
Guatemala
Guinea
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
India
Indonesia
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kyrgyz
Republic
Lesotho
Liberia
Madagascar
Malawi
Maldives
Mali
Mauritania
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Nepal
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Pakistan
Paraguay
Peru
Philippines
Republic of
Moldova
Rwanda
Samoa
Sao Tome and
Principe
Senegal
Serbia
8.3
23.3
35.6
16.2
16.6
21.4
24.5
13.9
8.8
4.3
12.1
7.6
91.7
76.7
64.4
83.8
83.4
78.6
75.5
86.1
91.2
95.7
87.9
92.4
0.7
8.9
2.7
1.2
2.1
5.7
5.2
6
1
0.9
0.4
0.9
99.3
91.1
97.3
98.8
97.9
94.3
94.8
94
99
99.1
99.6
99.1
13.6
14.6
8.8
29.8
28.5
45.9
13
46.8
27
19.2
22.5
29.3
61.7
29.1
19.5
34.9
52.1
25.8
27.1
9.3
8.4
20.6
29.7
11.1
75.3
43.7
28.3
64.7
80.6
71.7
40.1
56.1
35.4
39.8
52.2
40.4
18.1
33.4
31.1
46.1
35.4
64.0
32.4
83.4
76.3
48.2
43.1
72.5
2008 DHS
1998-99 DHS
2005 DHS
2009 DHS
2005-06 DHS
2005-06 DHS
2005-06 DHS
2007 DHS
2009 DHS
2011 MICS
2008-09 DHS
1997 DHS
13.8
19.4
33.7
23.4
6.3
50.4
24
10.7
41.6
5.2
28.7
25
59
28.7
10.8
11.7
14.5
5.1
9.6
86.2
80.6
66.3
76.6
93.7
49.6
76
89.3
58.4
94.8
71.3
75
41
71.3
89.2
88.3
85.5
94.9
90.4
2.3
8.8
11.4
2.2
0.8
8.5
0.5
0.8
7.8
0.3
6.8
7.5
2.9
0.9
2.3
1.9
5.2
1.5
1.2
97.7
91.2
88.6
97.8
99.2
91.5
99.5
99.2
92.2
99.7
93.2
92.5
97.1
99.1
97.7
98.1
94.8
98.5
98.8
28.2
5.2
24.6
28.8
15
7.7
5.3
38.4
20
40.9
17.6
61.1
4.3
3
6.7
35.4
60.7
25.9
58.4
29.6
40.7
26.8
25.2
36.9
34.8
35.5
10.3
16.9
34.3
41.6
16.7
11.2
18
20.2
21.2
16
33.7
14.2
57.8
45.9
51.4
54
51.9
42.5
40.8
48.7
36.9
75.2
59.2
77.8
15.5
21
26.9
56.6
76.7
59.6
72.6
48.8
11.3
47.9
53.3
28.9
18.1
13.0
78.9
54.2
54.4
29.7
78.5
27.7
14.3
24.9
62.5
79.1
43.5
80.4
2009 DHS
2007 DHS
2008-09 DHS
2010 DHS
2009 DHS
2006 DHS
2000-01 DHS
2003-04 DHS
2003 DHS
2006-07 DHS
2011 DHS
2006-07 RHS
2006 DHS
2008 DHS
2006-07 DHS
1990 DHS
2011 DHS
2008 DHS
2005 DHS
8.7
7
19.8
91.3
93
80.2
2
0.7
0.7
98
99.3
99.3
32.9
8.1
22.2
6.4
52.3
48.3
39.3
60.4
70.5
83.7
13.4
31.5
2010 DHS
2009 DHS
2008-09 DHS
24.3
5.1
75.7
94.9
0.7
0.9
99.3
99.1
5.8
44.8
31.4
7.2
37.2
52
15.6
86.2
2010-11 DHS
2010 MICS
41
29.9
70.1
0.9
99.1
5.4
28.9
Sierra Leone
3.3
96.7
0.6
99.4
47
17.7
South Africa
6.8
93.2
1.8
98.2
54.2
28.6
Swaziland
7.7
92.3
0.4
99.6
7.9
27.4
Timor-Leste
19.1
80.9
2.3
97.7
5.1
49.8
Togo
12.7
87.3
2.1
97.9
40.2
14.7
Turkey
6.2
93.8
1.4
98.6
26.6
13.2
Turkmenistan
20
80
1.8
98.2
13.9
31.3
Uganda
5.7
94.3
3
97
48.3
30.6
Ukraine
18.4
81.6
4.2
95.8
14.9
16.3
United
Republic of
Tanzania
10.8
89.2
1.2
98.8
15.8
13.5
Uzbekistan
9.7
90.3
2.5
97.5
21
15.6
Viet Nam
16.6
83.4
2.8
97.2
8.6
34.3
Yemen
17.8
82.2
1.2
98.8
28.1
22.6
Zambia
23.2
76.8
1
99
36.2
18.5
Zimbabwe
Note: Data for distribution of adolescents according to marital status are from United Nations Population Division, 2012.
34.3
64.7
82.8
35.3
54.9
54.9
39.8
45.2
78.9
31.2
15.7
72.6
65.5
22.4
9.3
73.2
66.8
30.8
61.2
47.8
2010 MICS
2003 DHS
2010 MICS
2009-10 DHS
2010 MICS
2008 DHS
2000 DHS
2011 DHS
2007 DHS
2010 DHS
29.3
36.6
42.9
50.7
54.7
53.9
57.4
20.0
55.4
66.2
1996 DHS
2011 MICS
1997 DHS
2007 DHS
2010-11 DHS
42
Niger
Chad
Mali
Guinea
Mozambique
Five countries with the highest absolute number of adolescent girls with a live birth before age 18
India
Bangladesh
Nigeria
Indonesia
Pakistan
For the Indonesia Proportion of demand satisfied map and Adolescent birth rate map, due to limited number of cases,
estimates for Aceh, North Sumatra, West Sumatra, Riau, Jambi, South Sumatra, Bengkulu, Lampung, Bangka Belitung, and
Kep Bangka Belitung are the regional average for the 10 provinces ; estimates for Jakarta and Banten are the regional
average for the 2 provinces; estimates for Central Java and Yogyakarta are the regional average for the 2 provinces;
estimates for Bali, West Nusa Tenggara, and East Nusa Tenggara are the regional average for the 3 provinces; estimates for
West Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan, South Kalimantan and East Kalimantan are the regional average for the 4 provinces;
estimates for North Sulawesi, Central Sulawesi, South Sulawesi, Southeast Sulawesi, Gorontalo and Sulawesi Barat are the
regional average for the 6 provinces.
2.
For the India Proportion of demand satisfied map, due to limited number of cases, estimates for Jammu & Kashmir,
Himachal Pradesh, Punjab and Uttaranchal are the regional average for the 4 states; estimates for Sikkim, Arunachal
Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura and Meghalaya are the regional average for the 7 states; estimates for
Maharashtra and Goa are the regional average for the 2 states.
43
Niger
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
41 DHS 2006
1998 DHS
2006 DHS
18
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
4
CPR
Percentage of women aged 20-24 who gave birth before age 15 and 18 (percentage)
1998 DHS
2006 DHS
47
28
16
11
The adolescent pregnancy rate (before age 18) increased 9 per cent
between 1998 and 2006
25
24
UNR
TD
PDS
51
20-29
30-39
40 and above
Data not available
709
592
331
2010
405
2015
491
2020
2025
2030
Source: UNFPA
Notes: Estimates for Agadez, Diffa and Zinder are the regional average for the
three regions due to limited number of cases.
Source: DHS 2006
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
150-199
200 and above
Total
Residence
218
1998 DHS
199
2006 DHS
243
Rural
222
129
118
Urban
Education
241
No education
223
Primary
Secondary or higher
51
167
158
63
Wealth quintile
260
Poorest 20%
223
231
Secondary
208
229
223
Milddle
246
Fourth
223
148
Richest 20%
Source: DHS 2006
134
100
200
300
Chad
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
5,645 WPP 2010
Contraceptive prevalence rate, unmet need for family planning, total demand and
proportion of demand satisfied for age group 15-19 (percentage)
2004 DHS
2010 MICS
25
1996-97 DHS
2004 DHS
45
48
12
10
28
16
CPR
Percentage of women aged 20-24 who gave birth before age 15 and 18 (percentage)
30
19
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
The adolescent pregnancy rate (before age 18) increased by 6 per cent
between 1997 and 2004
26
UNR
TD
PDS
Proportion of
demand satisfied
among currently
married adolescents
aged 15-19
(percentage)
Notes: Estimates for Zone 1
and Zone 4 are the regional
average for the two regions
due to limited number of
cases.
243
2010
279
2015
323
2020
375
2025
424
2030
Source: UNFPA
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
187
2004 DHS
203
2010 MICS
Residence
194
Rural
216
166
171
Urban
Education
205
No education
224
Primary
176
203
109
147
Secondary or higher
Wealth quintile
140
Poorest 20%
216
217
218
220
Secondary
Milddle
234
188
196
Fourth
170
164
Richest 20%
Source: DHS 2004
100
200
300
Mali
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
Unmet need for family planning increased 10 per cent between 2001
and 2006
Contraceptive prevalence rate, unmet need for family planning, total demand and
proportion of demand satisfied for age group 15-19 (percentage)
2001 DHS
2006 DHS
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
Percentage of women aged 20-24 who gave birth before age 15 and 18 (percentage)
2001 DHS
2006 DHS
10
45
43
13 18
5 8
CPR
36
32 35
UNR
TD
PDS
46
Less than 10
10-19
20-29
30 and above
10
317
361
2010
2015
426
2020
506
2025
589
2030
Source: UNFPA
Notes: Estimates for Kidal and Tombouctou are the regional average for the two
regions due to limited number of cases.
Source: DHS 2006
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
Less than 100
185
188
100-139
140-179
180 and above
2001 DHS
2006 DHS
Residence
218
219
Rural
129
Urban
141
Education
208
No education
220
Primary
168
182
Secondary or higher
78
61
Wealth quintile
200
Poorest 20%
229
246
Secondary
206
225
228
Milddle
203
199
Fourth
Notes: Estimates for Kidal and Tombouctou are the regional average for the two
regions due to limited number of cases.
Source: DHS 2006
108
Richest 20%
127
50
100
150
200
250
Guinea
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
4,938 WPP 2010
Contraceptive prevalence rate, unmet need for family planning, total demand and
proportion of demand satisfied for age group 15-19 (percentage)
1999 DHS
2005 DHS
31
28
23
19 20
15
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
3
CPR
1999 DHS
2005 DHS
47
14
UNR
TD
PDS
44
Less than 10
10-19
20-29
30 and above
Data not available
227
256
290
327
199
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
Source: UNFPA
Notes: Estimates for Labe and Mamou are the regional average for the two
regions due to limited number of cases.
Source: DHS 2005
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
168
1999 DHS
154
2005 DHS
Residence
204
Rural
187
115
Urban
104
Education
195
196
No education
Primary
141
127
Secondary or higher
56
43
Wealth quintile
210
197
207
217
214
Poorest 20%
140-179
180 and above
Secondary
Milddle
171
167
Fourth
125
93
101
Richest 20%
Source: DHS 2005
50
100
150
200
250
Mozambique
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
Unmet need for family planning declined by 30 per cent from 1997 to
2003
Contraceptive prevalence rate, unmet need for family planning, total demand and
proportion of demand satisfied for age group 15-19 (percentage)
54
1997 DHS
2003 DHS
37
17
CPR
1997 DHS
2003 DHS
43
25
24
20
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
UNR
TD
PDS
42
10
Number of women aged 20-24 who gave birth before age 18 (thousands)
448
2010
513
2015
595
2020
705
747
2025
2030
10-29
30-49
50 and above
Data not available
Source: UNFPA
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
179
2003 DHS
194
2008 MICS
Residence
207
208
Rural
143
Urban
174
Education
221
No education
238
Primary
150-199
200 and above
216
Secondary or higher
185
60
106
Wealth quintile
234
223
Poorest 20%
197
Secondary
253
208
209
Milddle
188
192
Fourth
Richest 20%
Source: MICS 2008
111
130
100
200
300
India
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
90 DHS 2005-06
1998-99 DHS
2005-06 DHS
35
32
27 27
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
23
13
CPR
The adolescent pregnancy rate (before age 18) declined by 21 per cent
between 1998 and 2006
40
UNR
TD
PDS
Percentage of women aged 20-24 who gave birth before age 15 and 18 (percentage)
Less than 10
1998-99 DHS
2005-06 DHS
10-29
30-49
50 and above
Data not available
28
22
5
3
Age at first birth: 15
11,875
12,353
12,533
12,627
12,886
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
Source: DHS 2005-06
Source: UNFPA
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
107
80-119
120 and above
Data not available
1998-99 DHS
90
2005-06 DHS
Residence
121
Rural
105
68
Urban
57
Education
163
No education
112
Primary
Secondary or higher
55
Wealth quintile
134
Poorest 20%
122
Secondary
98
Milddle
72
Fourth
Richest 20%
Source: DHS 2005-06
33
50
100
150
200
Bangladesh
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
2007 DHS
2011 DHS
42
73
68
61 64
47
20 17
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
CPR
2007 DHS
2011 DHS
40
UNR
TD
PDS
40
2,904
2,991
3,049
3,009
2010
2015
2020
2025
2,778
2030
Source: DHS 2011
Source: UNFPA
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
126
118
2007 DHS
2011 DHS
Residence
137
Rural
129
90
91
Urban
Education
169
No education
188
Primary
167
146
112
116
Secondary or higher
Wealth quintile
170
171
Poorest 20%
154
Secondary
135
131
123
124
Milddle
Fourth
Richest 20%
Source: DHS 2011
98
77
84
100
200
Nigeria
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
42 DHS 2008
2003 DHS
2008 DHS
15
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
23
19 21
18
14
3
CPR
UNR
TD
PDS
2003 DHS
2008 DHS
28
7
7
Age at first birth: 15
28
Less than 10
1,978
2,175
2010
2015
2,476
2,855
10-19
20-29
30 and above
3,244
2025
2030
Source: DHS 2008
Source: UNFPA
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
126
121
2003 DHS
2008 DHS
Residence
146
148
Rural
88
Urban
70
Education
238
247
No education
Primary
150
165
Secondary or higher
45
46
Wealth quintile
205
162
Secondary
80-129
180
152
Milddle
130-179
180 and above
Fourth
Richest 20%
120
98
86
58
27
184
Poorest 20%
Less than 80
50
100
150
200
250
Indonesia
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
2002-03 DHS
51 DHS 2007
87 83
2007 DHS
54 56
47 47
9
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
CPR
2002-03 DHS
2007 DHS
TD
PDS
Proportion of demand
satisfied among currently
married adolescents aged
15-19 (percentage)
12
Less than 20
20-49
50-79
80 and above
10
1
1
Age at first birth: 15
UNR
No enough cases
1,079
1,064
1,037
1,076
1,045
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
Source: UNFPA
Adolescents who have no education and live in rural areas are most
likely to give birth
Less than 40
40-49
50-59
60 and above
No enough cases
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
51
51
2002-03 DHS
2007 DHS
Residence
63
Rural
Urban
74
41
26
Education
80
No education
86
Primary
90
98
Secondary or higher
37
35
Wealth quintile
80
Poorest 20%
49
59
Secondary
50
54
Milddle
71
46
Fourth
Richest 20%
63
24
52
25
50
75
100
Pakistan
DEMOGRAPHICS
FAMILY PLANNING
1990-91 DHS
2006-07 DHS
1990-91 DHS
2006-07 DHS
25
8
CPR
Percentage of women aged 20-24 who gave birth before age 15 and 18 (percentage)
27
20
* PDS=CPR/(CPR+UNR)
The adolescent pregnancy rate (before age 18) declined by 40 per cent
between 1990 and 2007
31
28
UNR
TD
PDS
17
10
1
Age at first birth: 15
895
955
993
945
1,020
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
Source: UNFPA
Notes: Estimates for Sindh and Balochistan are the regional average for the two
regions due to limited number of cases.
Source: DHS 2006-07
Adolescents who are poor, have no education and live in rural areas
are most likely to give birth
Number of births per 1,000 women aged 15-19, by residence, education and wealth
quintile
Total
2006-07 DHS
51
Residence
58
Rural
39
Urban
Education
87
No education
52
Primary
Secondary or higher
23
Wealth quintile
80
Poorest 20%
67
Secondary
52
Milddle
41
Fourth
27
Richest 20%
Source: DHS 2006-07
20
40
60
80
100
54
UNFPA regions
Arab States
Asia and the Pacific
East Asia and the Pacific
South Asia
Eastern Europe and Central Asia
Latin America and the Caribbean
Sub-Saharan Africa
Eastern and Southern Africa
West and Central Africa
Non-UNFPA list
10-19
27,141
315,136
149,235
165,901
26,665
53,383
91,561
45,025
46,537
63,173
Population
(thousands)
10-14
15-19
13,733
13,408
155,122 160,014
71,415
77,820
83,707
82,194
12,260
14,405
26,878
26,505
48,670
42,891
23,783
21,242
24,887
21,650
30,374
32,799
UNFPA Countries
WORLD
513,888
577,061
256,664
287,038
257,224
290,023
10-17
21,808
250,290
117,003
133,287
20,520
42,848
75,040
36,809
38,231
49,796
410,506
460,302
49.9
49.7
50.1
50.3
79.9
79.8
18.2
17.1
9.1
8.5
9.1
8.6
14.5
13.6
55
Figure 2: Disparities and inequalities in the ABR per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 by UNFPA regions, most recent data 1998-2011
56
Figure 3: Trends in the ABR per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 by background characteristics, two consecutive
surveys (1994-2008 and 1998-2011)
57
Table 2: Trends in the ABR per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 by background characteristics, two consecutive
surveys (1994-2008 and 1998-2011, percentage change)
Residence
Education
Wealth quintiles
Total
Rural
Urban
No
Education
Primary
Secondary
or Higher
Poorest
Second
Middle
Fourth
Richest
Arab States
5.9
3.2
16.5
5.2
-11.3
28.4
-5.9
-2.9
10.7
16.4
67.4
12.2
32.1
-21.0
54.2
17.7
17.2
-31.8
-10.9
21.2
30.6
62.8
South Asia
-14.7
-12.4
-14.2
9.4
-8.9
0.3
0.2
-11.4
-7.6
-20.7
-4.3
-23.8
-0.9
-27.3
52.3
-23.1
-32.0
-49.2
92.1
-8.3
-9.2
-7.1
17.6
2.6
2.9
-5.7
-4.7
-13.0
-4.4
-21.6
-7.8
-7.3
-8.7
11.7
-4.6
11.0
-8.2
-2.2
-10.8
-13.3
-3.0
-1.3
-0.4
-7.2
4.6
12.2
-8.5
-0.3
-0.9
-8.0
3.1
-8.7
UNFPA regions
58