Abstract: | The World Health Organization considers adolescence to be the period between 10 and 20 years during which individuals undergo significant psychosexual and psychosocial development. The needs an well-being of people, especially girls, in this age group in India, however, are neglected. Almost 25% of India's population is comprised of girls below 20 years of age. Adolescent pregnancies make up 10-15% of the total and may be largely attributed to early marriage, but these girls are prepared neither physically nor emotionally for pregnancy and motherhood. Adolescents who marry between aged 15-19 will nonetheless bear on average 6-7 children over the course of their lives. In fact, 80% of women's time between the ages 15 and 35 is spent either being pregnant or nursing offspring. Sections discuss nutritional deprivation and poor fetal growth, obstetric risks, and maternal and infant mortality, literacy and school dropouts, and psychosocial aspects of adolescent pregnancy and motherhood. Intervention programs could aim to increase total food intake, prevent against iron deficiency anemia, provide education and health care for girls aged 10-15, promote the use of contraception, register marriages and provide family life education, and involve boys in the education process. While the marriage age needs to be increased, this change should not be legislated. Change must instead result from education syllabi at the school level. |