High teenage pregnancy in Mt Prov alarms execs
>> Sunday, September 27, 2015
BAUKO,
Mountain Province – Teenage pregnancy is alarmingly on the rise in Mountain
Province making authorities institute measures to address this.
Some
110 students of Bagnen National High School (NHS) here who attended symposium on Adolescent
Reproductive Health were informed about physical changes during adolescence,
sex, gender and human sexuality, sexual orientation, and reproductive health
concerns following recent Symposium on Adolescent Reproductive Health Care.
Prior
to this, the school requested the provincial government through the Provincial
Population Office in partnership with Nursing Department of the Mountain
Province State Polytechnic College (MPSPC) to conduct symposium on Adolescent
Reproductive Health Care for students.
Provincial
Population Officer Shirley Chiyawan presented the situation of the Filipino
young people. This includes increasing
youth population, lifestyle, preference to the use of different forms of media
and gadgets, engagement in non- sexual risk behavior, experience of physical
violence as an aggressor or as victims, awareness and experience of harassment
with the use of technology, engagement in sexual activities, teenage fertility.
Chiyawan
also cited increasing teenage pregnancy in Mountain Province from year 2011 to
2013. With this, she encouraged
participants to think and consider the risks involved on their health and their
future in every decision they make.
Alfred
Fomocao Jr., college instructor of the Nursing Department in MPSPC focused his
lecture on health, behavior, and lifestyle saying physical growth and
development, sexual differences, psychosocial development, psychosexual
development, behavior, and lifestyle among adolescents were issued that needed
urgent attention.
He
said teenage pregnancy which Cordillera Administrative Region has the highest
teenage pregnancy rate in the country. This was according to a 2013 Young Adult
and Fertility Study conducted by the University of the Philippines Population
Institute.
Fomocao
ended his lecture with his encouragement to the participants to take care of
their body as it is the only place they have to live in.
Meanwhile,
on behalf of Bagnen NHS, John Libongen Jr. thanked the speakers for sharing the
information that their students should know to become empowered youth in their
school and in the community. -- Alpine
L. Killa
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