|
Running head: INFORMATION SOURCES, TEEN-AGE PREGNANCY Information Sources, Teen-age Pregnancy, and Contraceptive Use in Kenya: Implications for HIV and AIDS Control and Prevention Isaac Obeng-Quaidoo United Nations Fund for Population Assistance Nairobi, Kenya Cornelius B. Pratt Michigan State University East Lansing, MI 48824-1212 Charles Okigbo African Council for Communication Education Nairobi, Kenya Waithera Gikonyo United Nations Fund for Population Assistance Nairobi, Kenya Abstract (Word Count: 75) This study explores information sources and knowledge of contraceptives among Kenyan teen-agers. Respondents rely more on health clinics than on any other source for information on sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), their most commonly cited health problems; however, those with high knowledge about contraceptives are significantly more likely than those with low knowledge to report that the mass media are information sources. The implications of these results for preventing and controlling STDs in sub-Saharan Africa are presented. Information Sources, Contraceptive Use, and Teen-age Pregnancy in Kenya: Implications for AIDS Control and Prevention The purposes of this study are twofold. First, it explores sources from which teen-agers in Kenya get information on health or health-related problems and on contraceptives that they could use to prevent sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and pregnancy. Second, it discusses the implications of those sources for AIDS control and prevention among sub-Saharan Africans. Both purposes are predicated on three overarching realities: (a) the endemic nature of STDs, particularly heterosexually transmitted HIV and AIDS in Africa; (b) the finding that the high rate of HIV and AIDS on the continent is, for the most part, a consequence of the high rate of STDs (Green, 1994; "Improved STD Treatment," 1995; Rushing, 1995); and (c) the argument that the control of STDs is important in the fight against AIDS in developing countries (Grosskurth, Plummer, & Mabey, 1993; Rushing, 1995; Williams, 1992). Since Schramm (1964) wrote his classic on the mass media and national development, developing nations have formulated systematic policies to maximize the use of the media for economic and social development. The Schramm tome was an impetus for the subsequent application of public-communication campaigns to health issues worldwide (e.g., Rice & Atkin, 1989; Rogers & Storey, 1987; Steckler et al., 1995). Africa's health challenges are exceedingly taxing, as no region has been as consistently ravaged by diseases as has been that continent. And the pandemic is yet to reach an epidemiologic equilibrium (Piot, Goeman, & Laga, 1994). Today, about 70% of all known cases of HIV and AIDS occur in that region. Its cumulative incidence of HIV infections is more than 11 million, in contrast to Asia's more than three million (Bayley, 1996). It is the leading cause of hospitalizations in Africa's major cities. Even though health-promotion and disease-prevention agencies implement campaigns to stem the tide of the devastating effects of the pandemic, HIV and AIDS pose widespread problems, not only to health practitioners on the continent, but to those worldwide. A number of studies have investigated the reasons for Africa's pandemic (e.g., Mann, Tarantola, & Netter, 1992; Rushing, 1995). Macdonald (1996), in studying its incidence and prevalence in Botswana, identifies three explanatory factors: (a) that it is culturally acceptable for men to have more than one sexual partner and for married men to have concubines; (b) that young women feel they are powerless in making decisions regarding condom use; and (c) that, culturally, young women should prove their fertility before marriage by becoming pregnant. Another study raises questions about, and calls for more studies on, the validity of social theories that purport to explain the epidemiological patterns of the AIDS pandemic in Africa (Hunt, 1996). Still others have argued that the control of STDs is important in the fight against AIDS in developing countries (e.g., Grosskurth, Plummer, & Mabey, 1993). The spread of STDs is a sequela of the constellation of factors, namely, low level of awareness about them and Africans' dominant social and sexual practices. Thus, even though a growing threat to controlling the pandemic is teen-age sexual practices, the latter have not been systematically investigated by Africa's public-health services. This exploratory study attempts to fill that void, by first ascertaining youths' health problemsyyas reported by them; it then explores their sources of information on those problems, and presents tentative implications of the results for controlling and preventing STDs. RESEARCH QUESTIONS This study is guided by four research questions: 1. What major health or health-related problems do Kenyan youths report? 2. What social factors explain some of those problems? 3. How important are the mass media as sources of information for controlling and preventing those problems? 4. What are the implications of the results of this study for controlling and preventing some of those health or health-related problems? WHY KENYA? We focus on Kenyayyfor three reasons. First, it is the world's youngest country: 52% of its 30 million people are younger than 15. People between the ages of 10 and 19 comprise about 25% of its population and are the fastest-growing segment in the country (Center for the Study, 1995). Those patterns justify the focus of this study on teen-agers. Second, the country's adolescent fertility rates are among the world's highest. Njau and Radeny (1995) note that Kenya's "high teen-age sexual activity is reflected in the incidence of pregnancy, abortion, and STDs" (p. 2). One in five women aged 15 to 19 years has begun childbearing, either given birth or being pregnant with her first child. Seventeen percent had one child, and another 8.6% were pregnant, according to the Kenya Demographic and Health Surveys of 1989 and 1990. Illigumugabo, Njau, & Rog (1994) reported in their study of four rural districts in Kenya that 81% of girls aged 15 to 19 years had at least one pregnancy, 14% two pregnancies, and 3.2% three. Ten percent became mothers before they reached age 16, more than 30% had at least one sister who had given birth out of wedlock, and 9% had more than two sisters with children born out of wedlock. The girls were not asked to indicate the ages when their unwed sisters had their first children. Other studies have shown that by age 20, about 21% of Kenyan adolescents have had at least one child (e.g., Gyepi-Garbrah, 1985). Third, Kenya is strategically positioned as the port of call en route to the trans-Africa highway. This makes it a reservoir of, and a conduit for, the spread of HIV and AIDS, particularly by long-distance truckers who cross the region from Mombasa (Kenya) on the East Coast through Lusaka (Zambia) in the central region to Beira (Mozambique), and to Zaire in the West Central region. This "truck town hypothesis" asserts that the geographic distribution of HIV and AIDS follows the major routes of truckers who patronize prostitutes, spreading the HIV virus (Smallman-Raynor & Cliff, 1991). (The HIV and AIDS prevalence rates for prostitutes in Kenya are as high as 88%.) AFRICAN SOCIETIES' VULNERABILITY Traditional societies vary greatly in Africa and indicate cultural differences in attitudes or reactions toward teen-age pregnancies. In the traditional societies of the Akan of Ghana, the Ganda of Uganda, and those of the Ibos of Nigeria, teen-age pregnancies are infrequent because sexual activities among unmarried teen-agers are discouraged. However, among the Tswana of Botswana, the Zulus of South Africa and Swaziland, and the Swazis of Swaziland, the phenomenon is more common and usually results in early marriage and the subjugation of women to men, since single-parenthood is abhorred. The ever-increasing urbanization and exposure to international media and to Western education threaten the primacy of some of the traditional attitudes toward teen-age pregnancy in Africa. Among West Africans, for example, changes resulting from European influences have caused sexual networking to occur on a more extensive basis (Caldwell, Orubuloye, & Caldwell, 1991). For the African, urbanization threatens traditional norms and institutions that regulate sex (Mann, Tarantola, & Netter, 1992). In many of Africa's urban centers, evolving uniform points of view and attitudes supplant traditional and ethnic-based value orientations. The situation in Kenya illustrates the strong influence of those emerging factors on attitudes toward teen-age pregnancy, which is becoming increasingly prevalent. Such prevalence results partly from the generally youthful age of the entire population. According to the Population Reference Bureau (1990) about 45% of the total population is younger than 15 yearsyyby far the most youthful region in the world. In a large number of African countries, fertility rates are high (more than 6.5 births per woman) and the use of modern contraceptives is low (lower than zero percent). Recent demographic and health surveys in three sub-Saharan countriesyyBotswana, Kenya, and Zimbabweyyshow that increases in the use of modern contraceptives is associated with decreases in fertility (Population Reference Bureau, 1990). In Kenya, about 4% of teen-agers initiate coitus at the age of 10, although a mean age of 13.5 years for sexual initiation has been reported in some districts. In general, about 26% of single women aged 15 to 19 years report having had sexual intercourse (Kenya Demographic, 1993; Kiruhi & Simalane, 1993; Njau, 1993). Even though there are variations among ethnic groups, sometimes as many as 83% of Kenyan teen-agers report having had coitus before their 19th birthday (Illinigumugabo, Njau, & Rog, 1994; Ojwang & Maggwa, 1991; Okumu & Chege, 1994). Not only is the incidence of teen-age pregnancy high and that 11-year-old girls are mothers, but teen-agers account for between 20% and 30% of the total pregnancies occurring among women aged between 15 and 49 years. Adolescents comprise as many as 35% of total obstetric cases in various parts of Kenya (Kenya Demographic, 1993; Leman, Makokha, Sanghui, & Wanjala, 1987). Although not all teen-age pregnancies are pre-marital pregnancies, many pregnant teen-agers are unmarried. Pre-marital pregnancies among Kenyan teen-agers are explained by "an interplay of individual and social factors within the context of the communities in which the teen-agers live" (Njau & Radeny, 1995, p. 4). Early sexual activity in the absence of appropriate knowledge and the use of contraceptive devices are major contributors to teen-age pregnancy. Even when contraceptive awareness is shown to be as high as 76%, contraceptive use is reported to be as low as 4% (Kenya Demographic, 1989). Only about 18% of sexually experienced adolescent girls use contraceptives (Okumu & Chege, 1994), while in the capital city of Nairobi, the proportion of users is as low as 5% (Njau & Radeny, 1995). That low use reflects a combination of factors that include disapproval, unavailability, lack of information, and the inconsistent nature of teen-agers' sexual behavior, among others (Njau, 1993; Njau & Radney, 1995). Public-information campaigns that include the mass media are major sources of information for a variety of health problems and awareness about strategies for combating them (Allen et al., 1992; Wallack, 1990). Such mass media are complemented by interpersonal media (Njau, 1993; Njau & Radney, 1995; Obunga, 1989). HIV AND AIDS: A BRIEF ON THEIR BEGINNINGS, THEIR CONTROL, THEIR PREVENTION The oldest known case that was strongly suggestive of AIDS occurred in 1952, when a 28-year-old male was diagnosed with "viral pneumonia" and admitted to a Memphis, Tennessee, hospital (Grmek, 1989/1990). In 1968, a 15-year-old African-American male was admitted to St. Louis City (Mo.) Hospital, where Chlamydia trachomatis was isolated from his lymph, serum, and prostatic secretion (Grmek). He died May 15, 1969. An autopsy showed lesions typical of Kaposi's sarcoma. The beginnings of the disease in Africa may be traced to a Paris-based Portuguese cab driver who had served in the Angolan civil war, after which he worked as a truck driver between 1976 and 1979, plying the route between Angola and Mozambique, driving through Zaire (Grmek). He died in Portugal in 1979; his frozen serum later tested positive for HIV-2. AIDS was first documented in Africa in 1983. David Serwadda, a Ugandan pulmonary specialist, observed patients who had symptoms of what were then called "the new American disease." In Zambia, Anne Bayley, a surgeon, noted that her young patients who suffered from a voracious and untreatable lesion died because this new version of Kaposi's sarcoma did not respond to medication. In October 1983, Peter Piot found that 38 samples of sera from hospital patients in Kinshasa, Zaire, were infected with HIV. In early 1984, Nathan Clumeck and his colleagues found AIDS in 21 Zairian patients. Since those early sporadic cases, HIV infections and AIDS have spread across Africa (Hilts, 1994), infecting people in the most productive years of their lives. In contrast to other continents, Africa, particularly its Western part, has a second pandemic: HIV-2. In Kenya, STDs, including HIV and AIDS, are prevalent among teen-agers, many of whom engage in unprotected sex and are largely misinformed or uninformed about the consequences of their sexual behaviors. The Kenya National AIDS Control Program (1992) reported that teen-agers aged between 15 and 19 constitute 35% of all reported AIDS cases in Kenya. It estimates that by the year 2000, about 41,000 young people will be infected with the AIDS virusyya significant increase from the 1985 figure of 2,365. Njau and Radeny (1995) reported that "the rising level of STDs [and] HIV/AIDS among adolescents (in Kenya) is related to misinformation concerning sexual behavior and AIDS" (p. 6). AIDS in Kenya presents challenges for public-information management. From an initial denial of the pandemic by public officers who feared its adverse consequences on the tourist industry, there is now a campaign to direct both local and international attention to the unsubstantiated claims for a medical cure. Arthur Obel, a scientist whose work is supported by the Kenyan Government, has made confusing claims about inventing a cure for AIDS. While those claims have generated a great deal of controversy, they have not provided the much-needed education on the need of teen-agers to take precautions against HIV, AIDS and other STDs. METHOD This study employs a two-phase method: interviewer-assisted questionnaires (Phase 1), and focus groups (Phase 2). Phase 1 Sample. In May 1994, a systematic sample of Kenyans aged 15 to 19 years (N = 351) was selected from residents in three residential areas in Kenya's second-largest city, Mombasa. The areas are Mombasa Municipal Estate, National Housing Corporation, and Kizinge Estate. They were selected partly because of their high proportion of (residential) teen-agers and partly because of their economic, social, and ethnic diversities. Because of our interest in interviewing teen-agers, every effort was made to select respondents in the 15- to 19-year-old category. Procedures. The questionnaire was administered by 25 participants of a course in Information-Education-Communication Audience Research and Segmentation for Population, which was organized by the Regional Training Program of the United Nations Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA), Nairobi, Kenya. The design and administration of the questionnaire were requirements of the training program. Interviewer-assisted questionnaires. A 43-item questionnaire was developed by participants in the UNFPA course, pretested among Kenyan teen-agers, and modified. It contained questions on respondents' knowledge and practices regarding the use of contraceptives, their perceptions of the causes of pregnancy, their beliefs about adolescent reproductive health, their sources of information on health-related issues, and their demographic profiles. Phase 2 Focus groups. In addition to the survey instrument (Phase 1), six focus groups (FGs) were organized on six major themes: adolescent reproductive health, contraceptive use, family life education, family communication patterns, peer pressure, and access to health facilities and to health-related information. They were held in the three residential areas from which respondents were selected for Phase 1 of this study. Focus groups, a qualitative method, typically have an advantage over quantitative methods in that they enable the researcher to capture participants' diverse perspectives of their world without the presuppositions of predetermined categories (Hammersley, 1989). They are particularly useful in exploring questions on HIV and AIDS because they enable the researcher to understand how participants' understanding of AIDS was constructedyythat is, the cultural construction of experienceyyand to explore a diversity of opinions rather than representative opinions (Kitzinger, 1994). Their use in this study will provide a qualitative picture of youths' perceptions of adolescent sexual behaviors and their use of information sources about those behaviors. The selection of the eight participants in each FG was purposive; the demographic profile of participants was comparable to that of respondents (Table 1). Respondents to the interview schedules did not participate in the FGs. Each discussion, which lasted one hour, was moderated by a participant in the UNFPA training program and recorded (manually) by another. RESULTS Phase 1: Interview responses Demographic profiles. Overall, there were 351 teen-agers, of which 38% (n = 133) were male and 62% (n = 218) were female. Their highest educational levels ranged from "none" to "completed secondary." More primary-school graduates than secondary-school graduates participated in both the survey and the focus-group sessions. _____________________ Table 1 about here _____________________ Research Question 1: What are major teen-age health-related problems? Respondents most frequently cited HIV, AIDS, STDs, malaria, dysentery, and insanitation as the major health problems of Kenya's youths. The others were pregnancy or abortion, menstrual irregularities, drug abuse, and others, which included allergy, fevers and ear-nose-throat disorders. ___________________ Table 2 about here ___________________ Teen-age pregnancy. About 79% (n = 277) of the respondents had heard of teen-age pregnancy and 84% (n = 295) knew of girls aged 15 to 19 years who had gotten pregnant. On being asked what pregnant teen-agers did on discovering they were pregnant, 61% (n = 215) said they had an abortion, while 52% (n = 181) said they gave birth. These results show that teen-age pregnancies, STDs, and HIV and AIDS were perceived as common health issues by the Kenyan youths interviewed in this study. Research Question 2: What reported social factors explain teen-age pregnancy? A majority (70%) of respondents saw teen-age pregnancy as a national problem; the rest disagreed. The top four factors, in order of mention, that explained the reported prevalence of teen-age pregnancy were religion, lack of parental guidance, mass media exposure, and lack of contraceptives. The other factors were low-level education and peer pressure. ____________________ Table 3 about here _____________________ Research Question 3: To what extent are the mass media sources of information on contraceptives? Institutional sources such as hospitals, clinics, and the Ministry of Health were cited most frequently. The media were the second most important source of information on contraceptives. The importance of the media as sources of contraceptive information is more clearly evidenced in the relationship between knowledge levels and sources. When respondents' levels of knowledgeyyhigh or lowyyare cross-tabulated with media use, results indicate that those with high levels of knowledge about contraceptives tend to cite the media significantly more often than their counterparts with low levels of knowledge (y2 [1, N = 82] = 28.0, p <.001). High knowledge levels are also significantly associated with the school (y2 [1, N = 73] = 4.94, p < .05) and the home (y2 [1, N = 47] = 9.38, p < .01) as information sources. High knowledge levels are not associated with counseling, friends, and neighbors as information sources. Therefore, it appears the mass media have two contradictory effects on respondents: as contributing to the incidence of teen-age pregnancy (Table 3), and as distributing contraceptive information to them. _________________________ Tables 4 and 5 about here _________________________ Respondents indicated awareness of various kinds of contraceptives. Birth-control pills and condoms were the most commonly mentioned methods, followed by the loop and IUCD. The least-known methods were foam, jelly, natural mechanisms, and tubal ligation. The diaphragm and "injectables" were also fairly well-known by respondents. ____________________ Table 6 about here ____________________ Research Question 4: What are the implications of results for controlling and preventing AIDS? The reported incidence of pregnancy among the teen-agers, their familiarity with the problem, and acquaintanceship with teen-agers who had become pregnant suggest that a considerable number of youths tend to engage in sexual activities. Therefore, they tend to expose themselves to risks associated with contracting STDs, HIV and AIDS, all of which were perceived as a problem by about 40% of the male respondents, and 34% of their female counterparts. Asked to suggest what could be done about the problem, counseling was most frequently cited (40% of the time), followed by the use of contraceptives (17%). Other methods were abstinence (13%), education (12%), and parental guidance (11%). ____________________ Table 7 about here ____________________ About 70% of the respondents said that contraceptive use encouraged them to engage in sexual activities. Even though there were no specific questions on the incidence of HIV and AIDS among the respondents, the responses suggest strongly that unprotected sex was common. Phase 2: Focus-group responses Complementing the survey research results were those of six focus-group (FG) sessions, consisting of two male groups, two female groups, and two mixed groups. Audiotapes of the discussions were transcribed and analyzed according to the key words or phrases in the six themes that set the directions for the sessions. Even though we expected some gender differences in their responses to discussion items, we found hardly any difference in their responses. Therefore, the presentation of the qualitative responses to our questions will be presented without much distinction by gender. Health-related problems. The discussions started by asking participants to identify some of the major health or health-related problems of Kenya's youths. They mentioned teen-age pregnancy, drug abuse, alcoholism and unprotected sex. "I can say some of them [youths] do not protect themselves," one participant said matter-of-factly. "You find that they go with one man this day and another man another day. This is why I feel that the youths are responsible for spreading the STDs." On the prevalence of teen-age pregnancyyyas a health problemyyparticipants agreed that there were many instances of such pregnancies in their community. One female said: "We have young girls who give birth in school which I think is not nice . . . to have children while in school. They are not expected to have babies at that time." On the use of contraceptives to prevent pregnancy, another female remarked: "The dilemma is on whether to use or not use . . . Some girls are not sure whether to use contraceptives or not . . . they are not sure on how to use them." Controlling and preventing health problems. When participants were asked to discuss the prevention of HIV, AIDS, and STDs, they indicated that youths should be taught about the dangers of all three. One female said: "They should be taught by parents, teachers, and elders." Condoms were cited as another solution toward preventing the spread of STDs among youths. This suggestion was opposed by some participants, one of whom argued: "Some young people do not have enough knowledge about condom use. They may try to use them and end up contracting the infection." Another commented: "Condoms are unreliable. They break if used wrongly." One participant stressed the fact that one needs to have money to purchase condoms and the youths may not be given such money by their parents. Another, however, claimed that early maturity is a factor that contributes to premature sex, with its consequent pregnancies and diseases. He said: "Nowadays, we young people, we mature early, especially girls are growing very fast, all their sexual organs are working fast." On the use of contraceptives, a female participants said, "Girls should seek advice from older people." Another suggested: "Girls should seek counseling and avoid 'such things.'" One male discussant questioned the meaning of 'such things' and the female explained that it meant sex, diseases, and pregnancy. She further explained: " . . . so the only alternative . . . before you know how to use contraceptives, you should avoid sex . . . because sex encourages the use of contraceptives." Another female argued: " . . . instead of using these contraceptives of which we do not know the correct way of using them, it is better for us to avoid sex . . . sex brings us problems . . . pregnancy and STDs." One male, however, disagreed with the females. He argued: "It is hard to restrain people from using contraceptives because some people are really fond of indulging in sex." In response to the preceding remark, one male participant asked him how the problem of AIDS could be solved if youths were fond of sex. He replied: "By providing more information, people would be taught more about AIDS." Implications of FG results for controlling and preventing health-related problems. The participants mentioned condom most frequently as the method for preventing the spread of STDs, adding that boys use them with more frequency. One male participant commented: "You see, boys do not think about pregnancy. It does not come to their minds. They just think about themselves." Three male discussants did not seem to understand the function of contraceptives. One said, "Pills are used to prevent diseases." He was promptly corrected by a female who said, "The use of the pill cannot prevent diseases, but can prevent pregnancy." She quickly added, "It is condom that can prevent pregnancy, as well as diseases." When participants were asked about their preferred contraceptive, most mentioned condoms. One said, "First, to us, it is the easiest method . . . condoms are good to prevent an unwanted pregnancy." Some of the participants who disliked contraceptives argued: "These pills, they pile up in your stomach when you get used to them and you may end up being sick." "These condoms may cause infection." "If one is introduced early to [contraceptives] the methods can affect their reproductive organs. They may be unable to reproduce." "When you try to figure out the way this sex was brought about, it was brought about to the parents and to the people who are already married. For teen-agers, the repercussions of sexual activities are high." Sources of information on contraceptives. Participants generally agreed that one main source of information on contraceptives is the health center. They saw the media as part of youths' health problems. A summary of three participants' opinions: "You watch a movie, and just because you have seen it [sex] being done, you decide to do it." "They do contribute [to sex]. Normally, if you visit schools, especially primary schools, you find the children are just discussing what they heard and saw on TV the previous evening. One such worst program is 'The Wild Rose' being shown on KBC [Kenya Broadcasting Corporation] because it encourages the youth in kissing and cuddling." "To me, I feel the very sexy magazines are not good. They make you want to have sex feelings." SOME TENTATIVE IMPLICATIONSyyAND WHAT SHOULD BE DONE This study provides preliminary data that suggest several implications for preventing and controlling STDs in Kenya in particular, and in the sub-Saharan region in general. First, the dependence on formal institutions such as health clinics and the Ministry of Health for contraceptive information limits the exposure of teen-agers to vital health-related information. It is important that the media be used to increase familiarity with the risks of unprotected sexual intercourse. Such media must include the traditional media, more commonly labelled "oramedia." They include instruments such as drums, horns and gongs and settings such as plays, theaters, and the marketplace; they encompass the nature of African societies; and they reflect the dominant mores of African communication systems, the essence of interpersonal and inter-group exchanges, and the normative principles that guide those communications. Further, secondary-school curricula should offer more material on reproductive health, and do so in settings that encourage no-holds-barred discussions of the dangers associated with contracting STDs. Second, because religion and sociocultural practices exercise major influences on the seriousness with which Kenya's youths perceive the major health problems they confront and on how to address them, prevention programs must be culturally relevant. As Kiefer and Hulley (1990) note, "Every epidemic must be seen in the particular social context in which it took hold, in order to understand both its propagation and society's response to it" (p. 9). Thus, it is advisable that programs targeting youths co-opt such dominant social practices into their themes; for example, using promotional messages to restrict intercourse to a single partner and to empower women on their role in decision-making vis- -vis protection during intercourse. Third, HIV and AIDS are a part of a larger set of the health problems of young Africans. Because exposure to minor forms of STDs could make teen-agers vulnerable to more complicated diseases, intervention programs must integrate the complementary strengths of various media. In its integrated mode, such programs merge advertising, direct marketing, public relations, publicity, promotion, and personal selling into one managerial activity. Teen-agers in this study tend to think that being at risk for minor forms of STDs does not necessarily place them at risk for the more fatal forms. Fourth, programs must address the pervasive sex-oriented stereotypes teen-agers hold; for example, that condoms themselves can cause AIDS, that the device is unreliable in preventing STDs, and that the pill could also prevent STDs. Even though health clinics distribute free condoms, their frequent, let alone their consistent, use is in question. Kenya's National AIDS Control Program must strongly advocate a national policy on condom use. A study of the acceptance of innovative female condom shows that 84% of all females reported that they liked it as much or better than the male condom and that 55% of them would use it if it were available (Ruminjo, Steiner, Joanis, Mwathe, & Thagana, 1996). Few options exist in light of the cost associated with the long-term effects of infections from STDs. Finally, as Ainsworth and Over (1994) wrote, "AIDS is fundamentally a development problem, not just a health problem" (p. 584). Health practitioners on the continent must, therefore, strengthen the links between HIV and AIDS prevention and control and the continent's national-development interest. Such links are particularly important in a nation where 52% of its population is younger than 15, and where 27% is between 15 years and 29 years. Because the effects of STDs are apparent beyond the health sector, the health and resourcefulness of African teen-agers could be at risk if health promotion and STD-prevention programs do not get the necessary policy-level support. In conclusion, this exploratory study suggests that the reported sexual practices of teen-agers portend tragic consequences for millions of Africans. Therefore, strategic responses to STDs, HIV and AIDS among Kenyan youths must include all-encompassing media campaigns targeting not only the young, but also adults whose lifestyles and social practices may be viewed as model behaviors by youths. The results of this study suggest that exposure to such media-based campaigns could be high if the youths' knowledge of contraceptives is high. References Ainsworth, M., & Over, A. M. (1994). The economic impact of AIDS on Africa. In M. Essex, S. Mboup, P. J. Kanki, & M. R. Kalengayi (Eds.), AIDS in Africa (pp. 559-588). New York: Raven. Allen, S., Serufilira, A., Bogaerts, J., Van de Perre, P., Nsengumuremyi, F., Lindan, C., Carael, M., Wolf, W., Coates, T., & Hulley, S. (1992). Confidential HIV testing and condom promotion in Africa. The Journal of the American Medical Association, 268, 3338-3343. Bayley, A. (1996). One new humanity: The challenge of AIDS. London: SPCK. Caldwell, J. C., Orubuloye, I. O., & Caldwell, P. (1991). The destabilization of the traditional Yoruba sexual system. Population Development Review, 17, 17-29. Center for the Study of Adolescence (1995). Adolescence in Kenya: The facts. Nairobi, Kenya: Author. Green, E. C. (1994). AIDS and STDs in Africa: Bridging the gap between traditional healing and modern medicine. Boulder, CO: Westview. Grmek, M. D. (1990). History of AIDS: Emergence and origin of a modern pandemic. (R. C. Maulitz & J. Duffin, Trans.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Original work published 1989) Grosskurth, H., Plummer, F., Mhalu, F., & Mabey, D. (1993). STD research in Africa. The Lancet, 342, (8884), 1415-1416. Gyepi-Garbrah, B. (1985). Adolescent fertility in Kenya. Boston, MA: The Pathfinder Fund. Hammersley, M. (1989). The dilemma of qualitative method (Herbert Blumer and the Chicago tradition). London: Routledge. Hilts, P. J. (1994). Introduction. In M. Essex, S. Mboup, P. J. Kanki, & M. R. Kalengayi (Eds.), AIDS in Africa (pp. xix-xxii). New York: Raven. Hunt, C. W. (1996). Social vs biological: Theories on the transmission of AIDS in Africa. Social Science & Medicine, 42, 1283-1296. Illinigumugabo, A., Njau, P. W., & Rog, K. (1994). The socio-cultural and medical outcomes of adolescent pregnancies: A survey report of four rural districts. Nairobi, Kenya: Center for African Family Studies. Improved STD treatment: A message of hope. (1995, October). AIDS Analysis Africa, 5, 10-11. Kiefer, R. G., & Hulley, S. B. (1990). A modern epidemic emerges: History and context. In S. Petrow, P. Franks, & T. R. Wolfred (Eds.), Ending the HIV epidemic: Community strategies in disease prevention and health promotion (pp. 3-19). Santa Cruz, CA: Network Publications. Kenya Demographic and Health Surveys. (1989). Nairobi, Kenya: National Council for Population and Development, Ministry of Planning and National Development. Kenya Demographic and Health Surveys. (1993). Nairobi, Kenya: National Council for Population and Development, Ministry of Planning and National Development. Kiruhi, M., & Simalane, O. N. (1993). Communication of information on sexuality and sex behavior with young people: A case study of patterns of communication in sex with youths in Nyeri district. Nairobi, Kenya: Center for African Family Studies. Kitzinger, J. (1994). Focus groups: Method or madness? In M. Boulton (Ed.) Challenge and innovation: Methodological advances in social research on HIV/AIDS (pp. 159-175). London: Taylor & Francis. Lema, V. M., Makokha, A. E., Sanghui, H. C. G., & Wanjala, S. H. M. (1987). Review of medical aspects of adolescent fertility in Kenya. Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology for East and Central Africa. Macdonald, D. S. (1996). Notes on the socio-economic and cultural factors influencing the transmission of HIV in Botswana. Social Science & Medicine, 42, 1325-1333. Mann, J. M., Tarantola, D. J. M., & Netter, T. W. (Eds.) (1992). AIDS in the world. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Njau, P. W. (1993). Factors associated with pre-marital teen-age pregnancies and child-bearing in Kiambu and Norok districts. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Nairobi, Kenya. Njau, W., & Radeny, S. (1995). Teenage school drop-out in Kenya. Nairobi, Kenya: Center for the Study of Adolescence. Obunga, C. (1989). Knowledge, attitude and practice: Survey of contraception (family planning methods) among teenagers in South Nyanza district. Unpublished master of medicine thesis, University of Nairobi, Kenya. Ojwang, S. B. O., & Maggwa, A. B. N. (1994). Adolescent sexuality in Kenya. The East African Medical Journal, 68, 74-80. Okumu, M., & Chege, I. (1994). Female adolescent health and sexuality in Kenyan secondary schools: A survey report. Nairobi, Kenya: Medical Research Foundation. Piot, P., Goeman, J., & Laga, M. (1994). The epidemiology of HIV and AIDS in Africa. In M. Essex, S. Mboup, P. J. Kanki, & M. R. Kalengayi (Eds.). AIDS in Africa (pp. 157-171). New York: Raven Press. Rice, R. E., & Atkin, C. K. (Eds.) (1989). Public communication campaigns (2nd ed.). Newbury Park, CA: Sage. Rogers, E. M., & Storey, J. D. (1987). Communication campaigns. In C. R. Berger & S. H. Chaffee (Eds.), Handbook of communication science (pp. 817-846). Newbury Park, CA: Sage. Ruminjo, J. K., Steiner, M., Joanis, C., Mwathe, E. G., & Thagana, N. (1996). Preliminary comparison of the polyurethane female condom with the latex male condom in Kenya. The East African Medical Journal, 73, 101-106. Rushing, W. A. (1995). The AIDS epidemic: Social dimensions of an infectious disease. Boulder, CO: Westview. Schramm, W. (1964). Mass media and national development. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Smallman-Raynor, M. R., & Cliff, A. D. (1991). Civil war and the spread of AIDS in Central Africa. Epidemiology and Infection, 107, (1), 69-80. Steckler, A., Allegrante, J. P., Altman, D., Brown, R., Burdine, J. N., Goodman, R. M., Jorgensen, C. (1995). Health education intervention strategies: Recommendations for future research. Health Education Quarterly, 22, 307-328. Wallack, L. (1990). Mass media and health promotion: Promise, problem, and challenge. In C. Atkin & L. Wallack (Eds.), Mass communication and public health: Complexities and conflicts (pp. 41-51). Newbury Park, CA: Sage. Williams, A. (1992). AIDS: An African perspective. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. Table 1 Demographics of 15- to 19-year-old Respondents and Focus-Group Participants _____________________________________________________________ Respondents Participants (N = 351) (N = 48) ______________________________________________________________ Variable n (%) n (%) ______________________________________________________________ Gender Female 218 (62.1) 26 (54.2) Male 133 (37.9) 22 (45.8) Religion Protestant 221 (63.0) 18 (37.5) Catholic 60 (17.1) 15 (31.3) Moslem 36 (10.2) 9 (18.7) None 1 ( 0.3) 2 ( 4.2) Others 33 ( 9.4) 4 ( 8.3) Highest Educational Level None 10 ( 2.8) 1 ( 2.1) Some primary 7 ( 2.0) 7 (14.6) Completed Primary 171 (48.7) 23 (47.9) Some secondary 97 (27.6) 10 (20.8) Completed secondary 19 ( 5.4) 5 (10.4) Other 10 ( 2.8) 2 ( 4.2) No response 37 (10.5) yy yy Table 2 Respondents' (N = 351) Most Frequently Cited Health or Health-Related Problems ________________________________________________________________ Health Problem Frequency Percent of Sample ________________________________________________________________ HIV, AIDS, STDs 126 35.9 Malaria 117 33.3 Dysentery 76 21.7 Hygiene 53 15.1 Pregnancy, abortion 32 9.1 Drug use 25 7.1 Menstrual 9 2.6 Others 140 39.9 _________________________________________________________________ Table 3 Respondents' (N = 351) Most Frequently Cited Causes of Pregnancy _________________________________________________________________ Cause Frequency Percent of Sample _________________________________________________________________ Religion 140 39.9 Lack of parental guidance 126 35.9 Mass media exposure 117 33.3 Lack of contraceptives 76 21.7 Low level of education 53 15.1 Peer pressure 32 9.1 Broken homes 25 7.1 Early marriage 9 2.6 _________________________________________________________________ Table 4 Respondents' (N = 351) Most Frequently Cited Sources of Information on Health or Health-Related Problems _________________________________________________________________ Percent of Cause Frequency Sample _________________________________________________________________ Hospitals, clinics, Ministry of Health 122 34.8 Mass media 82 23.4 Teacher, school 73 20.8 Parents, home 47 13.4 Guidance, counseling 38 10.8 Friends 28 8.0 Neighbors 21 6.0 Others 21 6.0 _________________________________________________________________ Table 5 Respondents' Most Frequently Cited Sources of Information on Health or Health-Related Problems, by Level of Knowledge About Contraceptives ________________________________________________________________ Level of Knowledge _________________________ High Low _________________________ Source of Information n (%) n (%) y2 p < _________________________________________________________________ Hospitals, clinics, Ministry of Health 54 (44.3) 68 (55.7) 1.6 ns Mass media 65 (79.3) 17 (20.7) 28.0 .001 Teacher, school 46 (63.0) 27 (37.0) 4.94 .05 Parents, home 34 (72.3) 13 (27.7) 9.38 .01 Guidance, counseling 2 ( 5.3) 36 (94.7) 30.4 .001 Friends 19 (67.9) 9 (32.1) 3.56 ns Neighbors 13 (61.9) 8 (38.1) 1.18 ns Others 19 (90.5) 2 ( 9.5) 13.8 .001 _________________________________________________________________ Table 6 Respondents' (N = 351) Most Frequently Cited Contraceptives ________________________________________________________________ Contraceptive Frequency Percent of Sample ________________________________________________________________ The pill 203 57.3 Condom 201 51.8 Loop, IUD 103 29.3 Diaphragm 96 27.4 "Injectables" 95 27.1 Vasectomy 81 23.1 Foam, jelly 79 22.5 Rhythm method 53 15.1 Tubal ligation 39 11.1 Others 75 21.4 _________________________________________________________________ Table 7 Respondents' (N = 351) Most Frequently Cited Strategies Against Teen-age Pregnancy ________________________________________________________________ Percent of Strategy Frequency Sample ________________________________________________________________ Offer counseling 141 40.2 Use contraceptive 59 16.8 Practice abstinence 45 12.8 Offer education 43 12.3 Provide parental guidance 39 11.1 Use legal measures 4 1.1 Others 111 31.6 ________________________________________________________________
|