Korean J Obstet Gynecol.  2002 Aug;45(8):1347-1353.

The Obstetrical and Statistical Aspects of the Unmarried mother

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Gang Nam General Hospital Public Corporation.

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
We focused the objective of this study on the obstetrical and statistical aspects of the unmarried mother, especially teenage pregnancy and 20's pregnancy.
METHODS
The 112 well-documented records in the 130 unmarried mothers who delivered at Gangnam general hospital public corporation from 1998 to 2000, were enrolled in our study. Unmarried mothers were divided into three age groups; teenage group, 20's group and 30's group, then, each group was analyzed by liable methods, SPSS (Version 10.0.7) and data were processed by Student's t-test and accepted as the significant meaning within p-value less than 0.05, 95% significant level.
RESULTS
In this study, teenage mothers were delivered lower birth weight babies than those of other groups (p=0.000001). Sex partners of teenage mothers, most school boy friends, were similar age to those mothers and low economic state. Despite desire of bringing up children (teenage 11% versus 20's 36%), they gave up their babies because of monetary matters and social bias. And teenage mothers felt stronger affection for babies than 20's. Teenagers' and 20's unmarried mothers have poor information about contraception (teenage group 42%, 20's 31%).
CONCLUSION
The unmarried mothers have been constituting many social problems. Fortunately, the absolute number of the unmarried mothers have not increased but the teenage pregnancy has the majority of unmarried mothers (> OR =50%). It is necessary for unmarried mothers to take the education of contraceptive measures, the social systems of bringing up the boarder babies and the retraining courses of unmarried mothers.

Keyword

Unmarried mother; Teenage pregnancy

MeSH Terms

Bias (Epidemiology)
Birth Weight
Child
Contraception
Education
Female
Friends
Hospitals, General
Humans
Illegitimacy*
Male
Mothers
Pregnancy
Pregnancy in Adolescence
Single Person*
Social Problems
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