Tag: pregnancy

  • Mother-child or child mother?

    Mother-child or child mother?


    Dire poverty, lack of education, lack of interest,
    nobody to explain them how their own body works. These are the dismal
    ingredients of a failed life experience. Today we focus on very young
    pregnancies, reported for girls younger than 15, we’re speaking about systemic
    flaws and about what can be done to mitigate such a scourge. Romania is at the
    top of a European Union chart focusing on teenage mothers. Gabriela Alexandrescu is the Executive President of Save
    the Children.


    Gabriela Alexandrescu:

    I
    won’t be mincing my words and I shall tell you that a quarter of the European
    Union’s teenage mothers are from Romania. We all know that 23% of those young mothers who have not yet turned 19 are reported for our country. We are at
    the top of the table across the European Union regarding the number of mothers
    under 15 and 2nd-placed, after Bulgaria, according to the number of mothers
    under 19. In Romania, nearly 10% of
    the births are reported for teenage mothers. Quite a few of them come from
    localities with no family doctor for the community whatsoever, or where family
    doctors are in short supply. These girls resort to self-medication during pregnancy,
    they don’t see a medical doctor to get their name registered and their
    pregnancy monitored and just wait until things are rushing forward or their
    condition gets worse. Save the Children has been actively involved in the field
    of children healthcare from across Romania, we contribute to the provision of
    the right to live taking action along five directions. One has to do with
    supplying maternities, the paediatric and the new-born sections with state-of-the-art
    medical equipment, the second pertains to developing the specialised support
    networks for mothers and children in the rural communities, the third such
    intervention direction is the one by means of which we stage specialised
    courses of the teams of professionals (medical teams, mainly), through the
    fourth intervention direction we develop education-for-healthcare programs and
    research programs, debates with the authorities and specialists for the change
    of social policies and the laws, when needed. So far, we have worked with more
    than 56,000 pregnant females (children under 15) and we saw the change. Each
    year we work in 46 communities with mixed teams of specialists, with trained
    nurses, social assistants, psychologists who are familiar with the realities of
    those areas and address the specific reality of the young mothers and the
    children.


    Oana Motea is a UNICEF Health Specialist. She has
    drawn attention to the fact that the scourge of being pregnant when very young
    is transmitted from one generation to the next, within the family.


    Oana Motea:

    The conclusions of the Unicef – Samas report, launched earlier this year, has
    revealed that pregnancies of mothers older than 15 could be prevented through
    education and family education programs tailored according to the
    socio-cultural milieu those adolescents and the fathers-to-be live in. The
    phenomenon is cyclical, it tends to repeat itself in the same family, from one
    generation to the next and goes with the poor economic, social and healthcare
    condition. There is no clear-cut identification of the role the authorities
    play, and of their corroborated responsibilities, as regards reproduction in
    the case of the younger generations and the prevention of pregnancies in the
    case of underage mothers. There is a need for integrated public policies
    capable of targeting education for healthcare, awareness-raising efforts at
    community level and tailoring the adaptation of the interventions to suit the
    teenagers’ psychology and emotions.


    Mother-child or child-mother? It’s hard to tell.
    UNICEF’s data on Romania are quite baffling, at that.

    Oana Motea:


    In 2019, more than 16,000 pregnancies were reported
    among teenagers, down by 9% as against
    2018. Notwithstanding, with
    the adolescents who are younger than 15, we noticed an 11% increase in the north-western
    and north-eastern regions. These percentages reveal how serious the problem is,
    at once calling for educational action to be taken, capable of targeting all
    groups of teenagers, using specific communication channels, with different
    message presentation forms, tailored to suit their needs.


    A solution to mitigate the phenomenon, which tends to
    become a scourge? Doctors’ offices in the rural areas, targeted programs. There
    is no other way.

    Save the Children’s Gabriela Alexandrescu:


    As of late
    we have even launched a survey among adolescent girls in vulnerable
    communities, in partnership with the authorities in line, with the Romanian
    Senate, it was a survey targeting teenage mothers in rural and underprivileged areas.
    We did carry the survey over July-August 2021, in 46 communities across
    Romania and unfortunately, our survey has pointed to a worrying, chronic
    deficiency of the healthcare services for the teenage mother, also pointing to
    detrimental social aspects, relevant to that effect. We can say 16 years and
    three months is the average age when the first child is born, among teenage
    girls in the underprivileged rural areas. Those with more than one child are 18 and one month
    old when the second child is born, on average, and are 19 years and five months
    old when their third child is born. 40% of the mothers and the pregnant
    teenagers in the rural areas have stated they have never taken the medical
    tests recommended during pregnancy because they had no access to medical
    services or no financial resources to do that. 87% of them have never used and
    do not know any contraceptive method. 72% of the young women and girls have
    responded they lived in very modest conditions, in one, maybe two rooms,
    sharing the premises with people from other families. 55% of them have stated the
    money they got was not enough for the bare necessities, quite a few of them
    relied on their children’s allowance, while a great number of them responded
    the pandemic has negatively affected the adult’s chances to work for their
    families. There are mothers, who, not having turned 25 yet, have given birth to
    their fifth child already. And here we have a problem, a worrying situation.
    That is why we, those with Save the Children, need to get actively involved to
    alleviate the scourge in the underprivileged rural communities, deprived of
    material resources and information means. And we need to carry on with those
    information, specific intervention programs, aimed at facilitating access to
    socio-medical services.


    The good news is that the Save the Children
    Organisation has also expanded to Republic of Moldova. The successful programs
    Save the Children implemented there proved reliable.

    Gabriela Alexandrescu:




    The
    successful example we had in Romania, we’re also taking it to the Republic of
    Moldova, as there, we work with the Healthcare for Children Association and
    Children’s Rights Information and Documentation Centre in Chisinau. So as of
    this year, we have that integrated, community program covering 16 counties in
    Romania and 16 districts in Republic of Moldova. Our effort is essential, given
    that we’re all too familiar with the fact that teenage pregnancy is associated
    with higher pregnancy risks. High blood pressure, anaemia, premature birth,
    underweight new-borns, postpartum depression and suchlike, while on the other
    hand, premature maternity exposes the young mothers to the risk of school
    dropout, to the grim prospects of being engulfed by the vicious circle of
    poverty, with a transgenerational aftermath. As part of the integrated
    interventions we had in the underprivileged rural areas, advised by the local
    specialists are the teenage girls, but also their families. It is important
    that we have an unmediated communication with the girls.

    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)

  • January 8, 2021 UPDATE

    January 8, 2021 UPDATE

    COVID-19 The new coronavirus strain discovered in the UK, and which spreads more easily, has been confirmed in Romania, in a 27-year old woman, the Romanian Health Ministry announced on Friday. The patient, who has a mild form of the disease and is isolating at home, has not travelled abroad recently. Nearly 5,000 new COVID-19 cases were reported on Friday, many of them in the capital Bucharest. The total number of cases since the onset of the pandemic is over 660,000. 1,100 patients are in intensive care, and the death toll exceeds 16,500. The Romanian Health Minister plans to streamline procedures for the set-up and authorisation of COVID-19 vaccination centres. Minister Vlad Voiculescu announced the relevant legislation is being amended to this end. PM Florin Cîţu said in a post that Romanias vaccination capacity is growing from one day to the next, and explains the number of centres is soon expected to reach 1,000, with a combined capacity of 150,000 vaccine doses per day. So far over 92,000 people have received the vaccine in Romania.




    VACCINE The EU has signed a new deal with Pfizer/BioNTech for the purchase of another 300 million doses of anti-Covid vaccine, in addition to the 300 million already bought, said the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen quoted by DPA. According to the EU official, 75 million doses would be delivered in the second quarter of the year. The EU started rolling out the vaccine produced by the German-US consortium Pfizer-BioNTec in December. The EU has also approved the Moderna vaccine and is waiting for the delivery of the first 160 million doses. The European Commission has been criticised for the slow pace of the immunization campaign addressing its 450 million citizens.




    BUDGET The European Commission has again cautioned the centre-right government in Bucharest that it has to keep budget deficit in check, after expenditures soared in 2020 whereas incomes went down against the background of the health crisis. We are expecting a robust 2021 budget from Romania, the vice-president of the European Commission Valdis Dombrovskis said in a phone talk with the Romanian Finance Minister Alexandru Nazare. The Romanian official pledged that investments and EU fund absorption remain top priorities. Minister Nazare said Bucharest plans a gradual narrowing of the deficit starting this year, so that it may reach 3% of the GDP in 2024.




    TEEN PREGNANCIES Romania ranks 2nd in the EU by number of teenage births, which has serious consequences on teenage mothers as well as social and economic costs, according to a report released by UNICEF and SAMAS Association in Romania. Adolescent childbearing is recurring within families from one generation to the other, and is linked with poverty and with poor health services and social-economic status. According to the report, in 2019 Romania had nearly 17,000 teenage pregnancies. Recommendations include legislative and administrative reforms to remove barriers to underage access to reproductive health and information and the introduction of mandatory reproductive health classes in schools.




    SPORTS The womens handball side CSM Bucharest is playing on Saturday against the Hungarian team Ferencvaros, away from home, in the Champions League Group A. In the first leg of the round, the Romanians won 25-19. CSM Bucharest ranks 2nd in Group A with 11 points, with Ferencvaros coming 4th with 8 points. On Sunday, Romanian womens handball champions SCM Ramnicu Valcea, take on several times European champions Györ, in the competitions Group B. The Romanian team is 8th in the group, with no points after 5 games.




    US The outgoing US president Donald Trump announced on Friday that he will not take part in the inauguration of president-elect Joe Biden. Trump will be the second US president to decline attending his successors inauguration, after Andrew Johnson in 1869. The announcement came hours after Trump had promised a smooth transition for president-elect Joe Biden’s administration, in a video posted on Twitter where he said he was ‘outraged by the lawlessness, violence and mayhem’ caused by his supporters who stormed the US Capitol. In Congress, the Democrats called on Vice-president Mike Pence to use the 25th amendment to remove Trump in the wake of the violent events on January 6th, in which 5 people were killed. The US Capitols security chief and other members of his administration resigned following the riot, in order to protest the violence. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Women of the Present Day and The Options They Have

    Women of the Present Day and The Options They Have

    In real
    life, however, things look different. In 2012, UNICEF statistics revealed that
    Romania had the biggest number of underage mothers in Europe. Further more, a
    survey carried by the national Statistics Institute over January 2012 and March
    2013 showed that out of 12,073 pregnant women aged between 15 and 19, 7, 547opted
    for abortion. In recent years the abortion rate in Romania has been growing
    consistently, experts in the field say. With details on that, here is Monica
    Carstoiu, an obstetrician with the University Hospital in Bucharest.






    Monica Carstoiu: According to UNICEF surveys,
    Romania has ranked first in Europe as regards underage women giving birth to a
    child. On average, 8,500 such births are reported yearly. It is in our best
    interest that abortion should no longer be the most often used contraceptive
    method, because in theory, there is a possibility to prevent an unwanted
    pregnancy. Data provided by the World Health Organization have revealed that
    Romania has the highest abortion rate across Europe: 400 abortions for 1,000
    born-alive infants.






    According to medical doctor Carstoiu and her fellow medical
    doctors: (quote) ‘Worrying statistics have also been confirmed by the
    Romanian women’s reluctance to see a gynecologist periodically. The main cause
    for their negligence is the lack of sexual education regarding the importance
    of the gynecological exam. (unquote) It is not only education that is
    missing, also missing is basic knowledge related to the options today’s women
    can make for their own body, civil society representatives say. Daniela
    Draghici is employed as a specialist in advocacy for sexual information and
    education with the Feminist Analyses Society ANA.






    Daniela Draghici: The big problem we have pertains to the
    method and capability to inform young women, and not only them, on their right
    to make a mindful choice as regards reproductive health. In 2003, Romania fared
    quite well at this chapter as a cooperation protocol had been drawn out between
    Healthcare, Education and Youth Ministries and the Romanian government. The
    protocol stipulated offering courses on sexuality as early as the second grade.
    The courses were to be taught by teachers with special training in the field.
    Such initiatives did not take off the ground, all the more so as the US
    foundation that made funds available to that end withdrew their financing after
    Romania had gained access to the EU.






    Part of the aforementioned program, which was subsequently
    aborted, even a sexual education manual had been compiled, which was endorsed
    by all ministries involved in that protocol. The manual was compiled based on a
    syllabus jointly drawn out by specialized NGOs. Everything was thought out so
    that family health classes – according
    to their official label – should be run also taking into account the sensitive
    issues of those involved, Daniela Draghici also said.






    Daniela Draghici: If things had carried on little by little,
    everything would have unfolded gradually so that neither parents nor children
    may get frightened. Furthermore, the network of family planning physicians
    ought to have been used extensively. General practitioners have also been
    trained through external financing, so that they may become family planning
    physicians. They are extremely well trained to that end, but they are not used,
    unfortunately.






    Among those physicians we found Iuliana Baltes, deputy manager of
    a medical compound with a family planning office, one of the very few offices
    still operational across Bucharest, financed by the Municipality of Sector 1.
    We spoke to her about the consequences of lack of information on reproductive
    health.






    Iuliana Baltes: A couple of years ago we perfected a family
    planning program and things rolled just about fine, with visible effects on a
    decreased abortion rate. Unfortunately, we have been facing a growing number of
    abortions and unwanted pregnancies in teenage girls. A carefully-structured
    family planning program would cost much less than the treatment of all
    consequences related to an unwanted pregnancy or an abortion.






    According to physician Iuliana Balteş, at
    the beginning of family planning in Romania there were almost 240 practices
    across the country. Their number has meanwhile dropped reaching 4 – 5 in the
    capital Bucharest. But patients are not that numerous. Why?






    Iuliana Baltes: Because
    there is no office where they can get correct information. They speak to each
    other and that’s how they reach the medical office. Through the national
    program that ended several years ago, we had the possibility to freely
    distribute certain contraceptives especially to pupils and students, a group
    that is exposed to risks given their lack of money to buy contraceptives.
    Unfortunately the government forgot about the program and now we can no longer
    help anyone with free contraceptives. When the program was ceased, the number
    of women who came to the office dropped. Amazingly two thirds of the women who
    came to the family planning practice were from the rural areas. They were
    consistent users and came regularly to take their contraceptives, because they
    were free of charge.






    Experts recommend the
    resumption of cooperation between the state authorities, between the ministry
    and NGOs with a view to resuming the information campaigns on reproductive
    health.