| Teen
Pregnancy Overview
Approximately
900,000 teenage girls become pregnant in the U.S. every year—78
percent of them unintentionally. That
represents 10 percent of girls under 20 and 19 percent of sexually
active teenage girls.
The
good news is that teen pregnancies are down significantly from
their 1980 high of 1,180,000. The bad news is that we still have
by far the highest levels of teen pregnancy in the industrialized
world—roughly 86 pregnancies for each 1,000 teenage females.
Canada, by comparison, has a rate of about 31 pregnancies per
1,000 girls, while
rates in Germany, France and the Netherlands, respectively, are
16, 20 and nine percent. Teenage birth and
abortion rates show very similar disparities.
The
economic impact of teen pregnancy is enormous. The federal government
alone spends some $40 billion a year helping families that began
with a teenage birth.
The
human cost is incalculable:
- The
father abandons the pregnant girl 90 percent of the time and pays, on
average, less than $800 annually in child support
- Thirty
percent of pregnant teens will undergo an abortion
- About
14 percent of teen pregnancies end in miscarriages
- Teen
mothers are more likely to deliver prematurely and to have low
birth weight babies, with accompanying risks of infant death,
blindness, deafness, retardation, mental illness and other permanent
problems
- Poverty
is almost inevitable for an unmarried teenage mother: more than
75 percent are on welfare within five years of the birth of
their first child
- Virtually
all the increase in child poverty in recent years is attributable
to the increase in unmarried childbearing
- Only
about one teenage mother in four ever completes high school
- Women
whose first child was born after age 20 were up to eight times
as likely to have some college education as those whose first
pregnancy was prior to age 20
- Seven
out of ten marriages fail among women who had a baby while in
their teens.
- A
child born to an unwed teen high school dropout is ten times
more likely than other children to be living in poverty by the
time he or she is finishing grade school
- Children
born to teenage mothers are 50 percent more likely to repeat
a grade in school, have lower standardized test scores, and
are more likely to drop out of high school than those born to
older women
- The
sons of teenage mothers are 13 percent more likely to end up
in prison
- The
daughters of teen mothers are 22 percent more likely to become
teen mothers themselves
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