Motherhood in early adolescence: a case-control study in Southern Brazil

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Abstract

This paper investigates factors associated with motherhood among adolescents from 14 to 16 years of age in Porto Alegre, Brazil. This is a case-control study with 431 adolescent mothers (cases) and 862 adolescents who had never given birth (controls). Data were obtained through home visits by an interviewer-applied questionnaire. Sociodemographic characteristics, quality of social and family relationships, lifestyle and history of abuse were studied as potential determinants to early adolescent motherhood. Conditional logistic regression was used for data analysis according to a two-stage hierarchical model. Results showed that lower economic class, schooling failure, tobacco consumption, alcoholic drunkenness at least once in life and having a mother who gave birth before 20 years of age were positively associated with early adolescent motherhood. Later menarche and having relatives or having friends in whom to trust remained as protective factors. Schooling failure, which obtained the highest risk, points to the important role of the school in this population’s development and its potential to stimulate healthy life habits.

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APA

Béria, J. U., Schermann, L. B., Leal, A. F., Hilgert, J. B., Stein, A. T., Alves, G. G., … Palazzo, L. (2020). Motherhood in early adolescence: a case-control study in Southern Brazil. Ciencia e Saude Coletiva, 25(2), 439–448. https://doi.org/10.1590/1413-81232020252.10232018

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