Data gaps in adolescent fertility surveillance in middle-income countries in Latin America and South Eastern Europe: Barriers to evidence-based health promotion

Authors

  • Tetine Sentell Office of Public Health Studies, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA;
  • Saionara Maria Aires da Câmara Faculty of Health Sciences of Trairi, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Santa Cruz, Brazil;
  • Alban Ylli Department of Epidemiology and Health Systems, Institute of Public Health, Tirana, Albania;
  • Maria P. Velez 4 Departments of Obstetrics and Gynaecology & Public Health Sciences, Queen’s University,
  • Marlos R. Domingues Postgraduate Programme in Physical Education, Federal University of Pelotas, Pelotas, Brazil;
  • Diego G. Bassani Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine & Dalla Lana School of Public Health University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
  • Mary Guo Office of Public Health Studies, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA;
  • Catherine M. Pirkle Office of Public Health Studies, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA;

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4119/seejph-1885

Keywords:

adolescent health, fertility, health promotion, surveillance.

Abstract

Adolescent health is a major global priority. Yet, as recently described by the World Health Organization (WHO), increased recognition of the importance of adolescent health rarely transforms into action. One challenge is lack of data, particularly on adolescent fertility. Adolescent pregnancy and childbirth are widespread and affect lifetime health and social outcomes of women, men, and families. Other important components of adolescent fertility include abortion, miscarriage, and stillbirth. Access to reliable, consistently-collected data to understand the scope and complexity of adolescent fertility is critical for designing strong research, developing meaningful policies, building effective programs, and evaluating success in these domains. Vital surveillance data can be challenging to obtain in general, and particularly in low- and middle-income countries and other under-resourced settings (including rural and indigenous communities in high-income countries). Definitions also vary, making comparisons over time and across locations challenging. Informed by the Adolescence and Motherhood Research project in Brazil and considering relevance to the Southern Eastern European (SEE) context, this article focuses on challenges in surveillance data for adolescent fertility for middle-income countries. Specifically, we review the literature to: (1) discuss the importance of understanding adolescent fertility generally, and (2) highlight relevant challenges and complexity in collecting adolescent fertility data, then we (3) consider implications of data gaps on this topic for selected middle-income countries in Latin America and SEE, and (4) propose next steps to improve adolescent fertility data for evidence-based health promotion in the middle-income country context.

Conflicts of interest: None.

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Further information

Published

2019-04-30

How to Cite

Sentell, T., Aires da Câmara, S. M., Ylli, A., Velez, M. P., Domingues, M. R., Bassani, D. G., Guo, M. and Pirkle, C. M. (2019) “Data gaps in adolescent fertility surveillance in middle-income countries in Latin America and South Eastern Europe: Barriers to evidence-based health promotion”, South Eastern European Journal of Public Health (SEEJPH), 11(1). doi: 10.4119/seejph-1885.

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Section

Review Articles