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Papua New Guinea medical journal ; : 26-38, 1997.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-976569

ABSTRACT

@# From July 1992 to August 1993, 330 under-18 year old primigravidae (cases) and 330 randomly selected 20-29 year old primigravidae (controls) who were delivered at the Port Moresby General Hospital were sequentially studied, using a standardized, pretested, precoded questionnaire. In stepwise logistic regression analysis, significantly more of the cases had menarche at less than 15 years of age, learned before menarche that sex causes pregnancy, were of highland origin, were unemployed, or had partners who were unemployed; significantly fewer of the cases thought that one sexual act could cause pregnancy, had knowledge of or had ever used a family planning method, or had planned this pregnancy. PIP: This study aims to identify factors (explanatory variables) which are associated with the risk of an adolescent becoming pregnant. From July 1992 to August 1993, 330 18 year old primigravidas (cases) and 330 randomly selected 20-29 year old primigravidas (controls), who were delivered at the Port Moresby General Hospital in Papua New Guinea, were sequentially studied. Trained research assistants administered a standard, pretested, precoded questionnaire. By using stepwise logistic regression analysis, it was revealed that significantly more of the cases had menarche at 15 years of age (81% vs. 49%), learned before menarche that sex causes pregnancy (51% vs. 32%), were of highland origin, were unemployed, or had partners who were unemployed. Moreover, significantly fewer of the cases thought that one sexual act could cause pregnancy, had knowledge of or had ever used a family planning method, or had planned their pregnancy.


Subject(s)
Adult , Female , Pregnancy , Analysis of Variance , Case-Control Studies , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Papua New Guinea
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