Proposed new law aims to tackle Philippines’ teen pregnancy emergency
- Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Bill nearing Senate vote; it would expand access to contraceptives, with activists saying education and improved health services also key
- Children aged 15 and under will have full access to reproductive health services without parental consent if bill is passed
A new bill that could be a game changer in the battle against teen pregnancies in the Philippines is inching through Congress, with activists hoping it could galvanise a wider campaign to tackle this “national social emergency”.
The Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Bill, which was passed by the House in September and has now moved to the Senate, aims to expand access to sexual and reproductive health services, like contraception, in this mainly Catholic country where early pregnancies, even among girls as young as 10, are rife and where the age of consent was only raised from 12 to 16 last year.
The Philippine Legislators’ Committee on Population and Development, one of the groups campaigning for the bill, said it was only two steps away from a vote in the Senate.
“We are hopeful that the senators will find the time to deliberate on the measure and see not only the bill’s merit ... but also its urgency,” Rom Dongeto, the group’s executive director, said in a statement.
If the bill is eventually passed into law, it would end the contradiction inherent in the fact that the legal age of consent for sexual relations is 16 but that written parental consent is needed for children aged under 18 to access contraceptives.
“When girls are already sexually active, abstinence is not enough. They need to have access to contraceptives, which is another legal barrier in the country,” said Leila Joudane, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Philippines representative.
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The bill recognises the “evolving capacities of children” to make their own informed decisions when it comes to their health and sexuality.
It calls for children aged 15 and under, who are sexually active or pregnant or who have begun childbearing, to have full access to reproductive health services without parental consent. All boys and girls from 15-18 should also be allowed the same, it says.
In 2019, the government declared pregnancies among 10-14-year-olds a national social emergency. The following year, UNFPA quoted World Bank data showing that the Philippines had 47 births annually per 1,000 women aged 15-19, equating to more than 500 Filipino adolescent girls getting pregnant and giving birth every day.
The costs of teen pregnancies in a country where around 30 per cent of the population is under 15 and where recent estimates say one in six girls gets married before she is 18, ripple out from the individual to affect communities and the economy as well. That’s why the bill is so important, say its supporters.
“It will save young girls from the clutches of maternal death, unemployment, poverty, improve their future and reinforce their self-esteem,” Edcel Lagman, one of the authors of the bill, said in a statement after it was passed by the House.
Lagman has previously said that early pregnancy is one of the most reliable predictors of future poverty. This is because girls who become pregnant often fail to finish basic education and become economically vulnerable, entrenching intergenerational poverty.
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The estimated net effect of early childbearing, taking into account lost opportunities and foregone earnings, is around 33 billion pesos (US$579.86 million) annually, according to a 2016 study commissioned by UNFPA.
Joudane said early childbearing increases the rate of maternal mortality and affects girls’ access to education, opportunities to be productive and future life choices.
There are also health risks and these can be particularly debilitating for younger girls. They could include anaemia, sexually transmitted infections, post-partum haemorrhage and poor mental health outcomes, like depression.
The bill may help to turn the tide against teen pregnancies but activists acknowledge the challenge goes deeper. Changing mindsets will also be critical as will expanding access to adolescent-friendly sexual health services.
“We need to address social norms and the legal barriers to sexual reproductive health services, and family planning programs need to be accessible and available everywhere,” Joudane said.
Last year, UNFPA, which wants to see zero teenage pregnancies by 2030, launched a US$1 million campaign alongside the Department of Health, the World Health Organization and the Korea International Cooperation Agency to support health workers as they work to combat teen pregnancies.
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The project is designed to help 275,000 adolescents in 20 towns in Samar and Southern Leyte – two poor and typhoon-prone provinces in the Eastern Visayas region, which has one of the highest teenage pregnancy rates in the country with girls as young as 12 and 13 getting pregnant.
Eva Estonillo, a midwife and planning officer on adolescent health in the municipality of Marabut in Samar, helped turn her health unit into what the Department of Health calls an “adolescent-friendly facility”, offering peer consultations and information on maternal care and family planning.
“Before our facility became adolescent-friendly, young people would often shy away from seeking help, or they would be sent away by rural health staff,” said Estonillo.
“Because adolescents are now encouraged to seek help from our facility, I noticed that more teen mothers have become interested in our family planning services,” she said.
Joudane is encouraged by the efforts to tackle teen pregnancy but says the focus needs to be maintained.
“The issue still needs to be a priority for all of us. It will continue to affect the life of girls in the Philippines,” she said. “It will continue to affect the economy of the Philippines, and the cycle of poverty will continue.”