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Why Teenage Pregnancy is a Problem

Pregnancy in females under the age of twenty is known as teen pregnancy. Teenagers are between
the ages of thirteen and twenty, and while they aren't quite children, they aren't quite adults either, putting
them at greater risk during this period of confusion. Teenagers are compelled to examine their bodies as
their sexual development progresses. They frequently engage in risky intercourse as a result of a lack of
sex awareness, eventually becoming adolescent parents, which is a major issue.

Most of these pregnancies are unintended, and minors are unprepared to take on the obligations of
parenthood. The rate of teenage pregnancy is pretty high over the world. According to studies, the quality
of teenage pregnancy in underdeveloped countries is higher than in developed countries, with rural areas
reporting more cases than metropolitan areas. This demonstrates that a teenager's socioeconomic status
has a significant impact on teenage pregnancy. Teenage pregnancies are most common among teenagers
from low-income families who have had little or no sex education.

Another factor is a debate about sex as a taboo subject. Parents and even instructors in schools are
frequently reluctant to engage in sexual discussions. As a result, youth are lacking in fundamental sex
education and safe sexual behaviors. Due to a shortage of information on sexual awareness, teenagers
seek guidance from their peers, which leads to them having erroneous ideas about sex. Teenagers have a
limited understanding of the difficulties surrounding sexual intercourse and contraception use.

In addition, sexual abuse of adolescent girls from low-income families is a major contributor to the
rising occurrence of teenage pregnancies in developing countries. These girls, who originate from low-
income households, are forced into sex trafficking to support their family and are exploited by older men.
In most developing nations, females are married at the age of eighteen, and teenage pregnancies are not
stigmatized socially or morally.

In conlusion, they often have to drop out of school, and without a formal degree, they have to do
low-income jobs to support their child. Such children hailing from underprivileged homes, often without
a father, engage in criminal activities and drug abuse, thus add to social evils and poverty. In a nutshell,
teenage pregnancies create a domino effect in society at large.

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