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An estimated number of 750,000
teenagers from 15 to 19 years become pregnant in Ghana annually, and
last year, about 14,000 teenagers became pregnant in the Central Region.
A
total of 762 teenagers in the Gomoa West District in the region became
pregnant last year and 17 of them were aged between ten and 14years.
Mr.
Bright Amissah-Nyarko, Central Regional Branch Chairman of the Ghana
Coalition of NGOs on Health (GCNH), made these known on Thursday in Cape
Coast, at its fifth Regional Civil Society Organizations’ (CSO) health
forum.
The event was on the theme: “Overcoming the Gaps and
Challenges in Attaining Reproductive Health Millennium Development Goals
(MDG) Indicators; the Collective Role of CSOs and stakeholders".
Mr.
Amissah-Nyarko said the high cases of teenage pregnancy was partly due
to irresponsible parenthood, broken homes, child neglect and peer
pressure, and gave the assurance that the Coalition would ‘not rest’
until there was drastic change in the situation.
Concerning
health in the region, he said malaria that continued to be the highest
reported medical condition at all health facilities, posed a major
threat, particularly to pregnant women and children below five years.
Mr.
Amissah-Nyarko said it was difficult to achieve the MDGs four and five
that seek to reduce child mortality and improve maternal health by 2015,
in the region.
He mentioned misconception about the use of
family planning methods, inadequate number of personnel with requisite
skills to deliver at health facilities and limited care for emergency
obstetric and newborn babies.
Mr. Amissah-Nyarko said the
Coalition would collaboration with stakeholders and organize health
educational programmes for people, particularly school children, in the
reproductive stage.
He said the Coalition would also intensify
education on sexual reproductive health and rights in schools, homes and
communities, as well as monitor the growth of teenage mothers, offer
them psychosocial counseling and make sure that those who dropped out of
school returned to the classroom.
Mr. Amissah-Nyarko called on
development partners, the Government, media and stakeholders to support
the CoCoalition in achieving its objectives.
Assistant
Superintendent of Police (ASP) Hilda Akarimanga, Deputy Regional
Coordinator of the Domestic Violence and Victims Support Unit (DOVVSU),
condemned men who engage in incest, particularly fathers, who impregnate
their daughters, and cautioned mothers who cover up the ‘disgraceful
act’.
She advised victims of these acts and their mothers or relatives to report to DOVVSU for the law to take its course.
ASP Akarimanga asked parents to give their children the right training so that they do not become reliability to society.
The
GCNH is a non-profit civil society organization, serving as an umbrella
and coordinating body of activities of all registered NGOs working in
the area of health.
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Source: GNA |
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