Philippine Daily Inquirer

POPCOM: RISE IN TEEN PREGNANCY CASES IN E. VISAYAS ALARMING

- By Joey Gabieta @joeygabiet­ainq strengthen­ing its

TACLOBAN CITY—JEAN was only 16 when she bore a child with her 17-year-old boyfriend in 2016. They were schoolmate­s in one of 247 public schools in Eastern Visayas where teenage pregnancy is common.

While she admitted that she was not yet ready to become a mother at her young age, she said she had no regrets.

“My baby [girl] is healthy and has brought us joy. My partner is turning out to be a responsibl­e man,” Jean said, adding that he has a job that ensures that the family will not miss a meal and that their basic needs are met.

According to Elnora Pulma, regional director of the Commission on Population and Developmen­t (Popcom), the situation of teenagers engaging in premarital sex was alarming, considerin­g that Eastern Visayas is one of the poorest regions in the country.

Pulma said 9,483 teenagers from the region got pregnant in 2015. Two of them were even barely 10, she said.

Nationwide trend

While the Popcom had yet to get the latest figures on teenage pregnancy in the region, the agency suspected that the number was increasing.

“This trend is not only in Eastern Visayas but nationwide. That is why it is now a national social emergency, which calls for a national action,” Pulma said.

She said the Popcom was bent on tackling this social problem by programs.

Pulma encouraged parents to open communicat­ion with their teenage children about sex and reproducti­ve health-related issues.

“We have to encourage our parents to discuss these sensitive issues with their children though sex remains to be a taboo [in the country],” she said.

Among the reasons for the rise in teenage pregnancy cases was the influence of social media where young people get access to pornograph­ic materials and peer pressure, said Reyan Arinto, chief of the technical services unit of the Popcom in Eastern Visayas.

Arinto said the agency visited schools to discuss the issues using a module where teenagers were taught about fertility and life skills that could help them avoid having sex at an early age.

Family disintegra­tion

“We also have a learning package of parenting and adolescent developmen­t which are being taught to parents, particular­ly on how to handle their children who are entering their adolescent years,” he said.

Melanie Alberto, Popcom assistant regional director, said family disintegra­tion was another reason for the increasing number of pregnant teenagers.

“Family disintegra­tion could mean one of the parents is absent or works abroad or they don’t give time and attention to their children and just provide them what they ask,” she said.

Arinto said teenage pregnancy should be checked as many young people could fail to finish their studies, depriving them of a good future.

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