The Role of Gender Norms in Shaping Adolescent Girls’ and Young Women’s Experiences of Pregnancy and Abortion in Mozambique
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Role of Gender Norms in Shaping Sexual and Reproductive Health Outcomes
1.2. Abortion in Mozambique
1.3. Study Justification and Objectives
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting
2.2. Study Participants and Procedures
2.3. Data Management and Analysis
2.4. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Participant Characteristics
3.2. Key Themes
3.2.1. Theme 1: Gender Norms and Expectations Put Girls at Increased Risk of Unintended Pregnancy
High Social Value of Motherhood
“[The neighbours would say] She [Fatima, the fictional character] doesn’t get married, just plays around, she is a prostitute. She only studies, is always inside… with a computer, her life is only about papers. She is refusing, showing off, instead of finding a husband, having children… she should look for a marriage.” (Triad interview participant, Nacala)
“God created you to give birth.” (Triad interview participant, Nacala)
“She is afraid. Who will buy the clothes? Who will support the child and provide food? So, if you regret being pregnant just take it out. The father made me pregnant and now he is denying it.” (Male FGD participant, Mugeba)
Factors Preventing Contraceptive Use
“Me, for example, when I know that I’m going to meet my boyfriend, I take pills that same day, or when I go without taking those pills on the day I come back, I take a pill the same day.” (15-year-old girl who had an abortion, Quelimane)
“… if the boyfriend doesn’t have [a condom] or she was prepared, she should say no… But sometimes they’re shy and let themselves be taken, they [the boys] say ‘if you don’t give it to me today we’re finished’, and so they’re tricked.” (Triad interview participant, Mogovolas)
Harmful Gender Practices Leading to Pregnancy
“Maybe for her to get pregnant she suffered a rape… was violated without her wanting that man, and from that she gets pregnant.” (Triad interview participant, Nampula City)
“Because the parents sometimes, with a 16-year old daughter, they force her to date even though she doesn’t want to…. Lots of parents do this. So she’ll start dating, to get soap, to get food… And when she’s with the man then comes the pregnancy.” (Triad interview participant, Mogovolas)
3.2.2. Theme 2: Gender Norms and Stigma around Adolescent Pregnancy Affect Pregnancy Decisions
Adolescent Pregnancy Is Highly Stigmatized
“There are other people who insult her, they say ‘we told you to take care of yourself and now you see how you are; can you see it? You are dirty, you’re covered in baby poo.’ Then, they start insulting her.” (Triad interview participant, Mogovolas)
“…there are mothers who forbid their daughter to play with her friend who is pregnant, they even say: ‘I heard that your friend is pregnant, and you are playing with her. Tomorrow it will be you too, I don’t want you to play with her’.” (Female FGD participant, Quelimane)
“Some are expelled from home to go and live with the father of the baby; if the father doesn’t accept it, she will live in the streets, under the trees...” (Female FGD participant, Quelimane)
“It was very sad for me to make that decision because, firstly, I would be taking a life that was inside me; secondly, it is an act seen as bad in society, society still condemns abortion, so it was very difficult for me because I was also afraid of having a haemorrhage and dying. It was not easy for me to make that abortion decision.” (Girl who had an abortion, Nacala).
“The girl ends up overwhelmed with so much suffering due to humiliation from her own family… so then she either ends up looking for one of those “godfathers” who will mislead her, or else she ends up committing suicide at some point, it happens, some commit suicide because they were pregnant and had no one to take care of her baby.” (Male FGD participant, Quelimane)
Factors That Lead Girls to Decide to Continue with an Unintended Pregnancy
“They say that children are our riches, so it’s better to give birth than to abort, even when the pregnancy is unwanted, we have to have the baby.” (Triad interview participant, Nacala)
“She must not do it because she is already married, the baby will have a father that will provide for her, because the husband exists.” (Triad interview participant, Mocuba)
“In the same way that I raised and gave birth to her, she must also do the same because today or tomorrow I can die and she might be alone, so, who will take care of her when she becomes ill? She must have and raise children.” (Female FGD participant, Mocuba)
“... She gets married to her husband, that is a reward for a poor woman… so she got married, legalized, she cannot take out pregnancy because it is a reward.” (Male FGD participant, Nampula City)
“It’s the parents that will be caring for her”… “the parents help her because she won’t manage by herself.” (Triad interview participants, Mogovolas)
Factors That Lead Girls to Decide to Have an Abortion
“It’s me who decided to do that, I saw that my child would be small, and I also was young, and I felt ashamed in the neighbourhood… and the neighbours… I was afraid they would laugh at me... saying look at that child, she already got pregnant…. that’s why I got rid of my belly, I went to look for my friend and she accompanied me, and they gave me this medicine and I took it.” (Girl who had an abortion, Nacala)
“I did not even want it, I wanted to study, but I’m pregnant and if my mother takes me to the man’s house I’m not going to study anymore.... Because they take you to your husband’s house, the one that made you pregnant... and he accepts her, it’s compulsory.” (Triad interview participant, Mogovolas)
“What motivated me more, more and more was thinking about my studies, I began to think that I would stay for many years without studying, my friends would be ahead of me, and I would be behind them.” (Girl who had an abortion, Quelimane)
“I was afraid because in my house they would tell me that it happened because I was not listening to what they told me... so, to avoid mockery I took it [the pregnancy] out.” (Girl who had an abortion, Nacala)
“I would take it out [have an abortion] because if I go home to talk about this thing here, my parents, my parents… will kick me out of the home.” (Triad interview participant, Nacala).
“... [when the girl becomes pregnant] the boys refuse to assume responsibility for the pregnancy, sometimes they even flee from their city or community, then the girl gets overwhelmed, she becomes unprotected and feels humiliated.” (Male FGD participant, Quelimane)
“I was studying.... I started to play and I got pregnant, I didn’t know that he was married... He was cheating me saying he wasn’t married, but later... I discovered that he was married. I wanted to take the belly out because he didn’t want to take responsibility for it, then I tried to cause an abortion.” (Girl who had an abortion, Nampula City)
“I decided to abort because I was not doing well in my house with my husband, he also used to come home late, so I thought that raising that child would not be a good thing... We were not getting along at home, life was just arguing, fighting, so I thought I’d better have an abortion.” (Young woman who had an abortion, Mogovolas)
“...lack of understanding at home, for example, if I’m at home with my husband but we are in constant arguments, then, the thing [pregnancy] happens and I discover it alone, my husband who lives with me doesn’t know, I will think about aborting because we are always fighting, almost every day he beats me, so, before he kicks me out of the house and I suffer with my pregnancy, I prefer to have an abortion.” (Female FGD participant, Quelimane).
“When the person is raped, they should not have that child.... Because when the baby is born, the more the mother sees the child, she remembers that horrible thing that happened to her, so she won’t be able to be happy. Often due to that they want to have an abortion.” (Triad interview participant, Nacala)
“She doesn’t even want to be disturbed being called ‘Mum, Mum’, she doesn’t want it... she doesn’t want to hear someone calling her ‘mother of [...], mother of Maria’, she just wants to be called by her own name.” (Triad interview participant, Mogovolas)
“I would think, I’m pregnant, my friend is not, it’s better to have an abortion, for us to be on the same level and enjoy life... Me being old and my friend young? No way, I wouldn’t accept it and that’s what would make me think about having an abortion.” (Triad interview, Mugeba)
3.2.3. Theme 3: Gender Norms Contribute to Abortion Stigma and Influence Choice of Provider
Abortion Stigma and the Influence of Gender Norms
“She is not a woman because she killed and got rid of her belly. If a man goes to her, like he wants to go out with her, others will say ‘that one wants to kill your baby’.” (Triad interview participant, Mocuba)
“[In the community] they would think and speak ill of her because she committed that act of abortion which is not accepted in the community, and they would also think that what she did is very bad, without thinking why she did it, they would judge without even knowing her.” (Triad interview participant, Nacala)
“These unmarried women do this [abortion] because they don’t control themselves, because if you have only one boyfriend, when you get pregnant you already know who the father is, and he cannot run away and refuse the pregnancy.” (Female FGD participant, Mocuba)
“She managed to conceive, but there was no one to assume responsibility for it or take care of it, she ended up aborting, so she is a prostitute, she ends up being a prostitute. … Who does it [the pregnancy] belong to? If she…stayed up from late night to the end of the dawn, she went out…then, she loses value of being considered a good, polite girl who is not a prostitute.” (Male FGD participant, Quelimane)
“We can say that she was right, to take it out [have an abortion], because she didn’t have a secure place or her boyfriend denied it.” (Triad interview participant, Quelimane)
“Cases of rape, in these cases the community can say that she is right [to have an abortion], she couldn’t accept having a child that the father doesn’t know.” (Triad interview participant, Nacala)
Experiences of Abortion Stigma
“Prostitute, she doesn’t deserve to have another child, she didn’t want the one God gave her… she didn’t want to raise it and took it out, she doesn’t deserve to have another child, she deserves to stay like that forever… she’s a slut.” (Triad interview participant, Nampula City)
“Others would hate her… mainly her friends would push her away because of the influence of their mothers…a mother would say ‘ahm…your friend’s behaviour, I do not like it, you have to stop hanging out with her because you can be influenced to do what she did’… her friends would stop hanging out with her and that friendship would no longer be that strong because she did something very bad.” (Female FGD participant, Nampula City)
“Hmmm, they charge, and she doesn’t have money. Or those nurses can insult her, ‘When you got pregnant didn’t you know? When you had sex without protection didn’t you know that the consequence would be pregnancy? … Why do you want an abortion, doesn’t this child have a father, did you do it by yourself?’ And because she wants to run away from this, from all these steps, she can think it’s safer to do it outside [of the HF].” (Triad interview participant, Nampula City)
Impact of Gender Norms and Other Factors on Choice of Provider
“[Teenagers] go to the healer because normally healers are neighbours, right? They prefer the traditional healer because if they go there with a fifty [50 Meticais] and say auntie, please help me… and the healer will give help right away, but in the hospital... [laughs] first they will tell you to bring your husband, then they will insult you right there... [while healers] do not ask you many questions because their intention is to get money, so they never ask where your husband is, etcetera…” (Triad interview participant, Mugeba)
“They usually think like…let me take medication for people not to find me, or if I go to the hospital, someone will see me. Now, for someone not to find me out, I want to go to the market or the pharmacy and buy the pills, do the things I know, and people will only find out after I have done it.” (Triad interview participant, Mocuba)
“I asked about it and they told me that if you go to the hospital you’ll spend a lot, so it’s better to look for a traditional healer.” (Girl who had an abortion, Mogovolas)
“I did it on my own at home because I was afraid that in the hospital they would refuse doing it for me, so I decided to take the risks alone.” (Girl who had an abortion, Nampula City)
3.2.4. Theme 4: Men, Family Members, and Others Have a Strong Influence on Pregnancy and Abortion Decision Making
Involvement of Others in Decisions about Pregnancy Outcome
“Well, after I looked for my partner and I told him that I was pregnant, he said that we had to terminate the pregnancy because he didn’t have the means because he was still studying…. and because I was also studying, and my parents didn’t know that I was pregnant. Also, I couldn’t have the baby alone, when my partner had already refused.” (Girl who had an abortion, Mocuba)
“Sometimes they [the men] say if you don’t want to abort, you will bear the consequences alone.” (Triad interview participants, Quelimane)
“It’s my boyfriend that decided. He said, ‘we’ll take it out because we’re kids, we can’t have children this early’. I accepted, he took out money, and came with me to the hospital.” (Girl who had an abortion, Mocuba)
“When I missed a month, I talked to my boyfriend, I said ‘I’m pregnant’. He said ‘you’re pregnant, what are we going to do?’ and I said, ‘ah, I don’t want to take it out.’ He said ‘let’s take it out because I cannot help you, I’m studying’ and then I said ‘okay... I’m studying too and my parents will not like it, I want to study first’.” (Girl who had an abortion, Mocuba)
“It was my parents [who decided], they didn’t want me to have that belly because I was young.” (Girl who had an abortion, Nampula City)
Involvement of Others in Abortion Decision Making
“A 13-year-old girl became pregnant, and the boyfriend lived with his mother and did not want his mother to know that he had impregnated a girl, and the pregnancy was already 3 or 4 months, so he bought what he bought, alone, and gave it to the girl.” (Triad interview participant, Nampula City)
“Well, I asked my mother what I should do, and she said we should go to the hospital, and then there at the hospital they will tell us what we have to do.” (Girl who had an abortion, Mocuba)
4. Discussion
4.1. Key Findings and Comparison with the Literature
4.2. Recommendations and Future Directions
4.3. Study Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Province | Communities | Site Characteristics |
---|---|---|
Nampula | Nampula City: Napipine, Gorongoza, Mutaunha, and 22 de Agosto neighborhoods | Urban and periurban neighborhoods on the outskirts of Nampula City |
Mogovolas District: Meluli B, Meluli C, and Namacarro B neighborhoods | Semirural and rural neighborhoods in and on the outskirts of Nametil town | |
Nacala Porto District: Mucone and Ribaué neighborhoods | Semirural neighborhoods of Nacala Porto municipality | |
Zambézia | Quelimane City: Sangariveira neighborhood | Periurban neighborhood on the outskirts of Quelimane City |
Mocuba town: Samora Machel neighborhood | Semirural neighborhood on the outskirts of Mocuba town | |
Mocuba District: Mugeba locality | Semirural and rural neighborhoods of Mugeba town |
Study Component | Province | Number of Discussions/Interviews Conducted | Total Number of Participants | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Triad interviews with young women and girls | Nampula | 10 | 30 | Girls from 15 to 23 years of age; students; single and married; with and without children. |
Zambézia | 9 | 27 | Girls from 15 to 20 years of age; students; single and married; with and without children. | |
Focus group discussions with adult community members | Nampula | 10 | 100 | 7 groups of women, between 22 and 52 years of age; single, married, and widows; literate and illiterate; with children; housewives, midwives, businesswomen, traditional medicine practitioners. 3 groups of men between 24 and 64 years of age; single and married; with and without children; students, informal and formal sector workers, unemployed. |
Zambézia | 9 | 90 | 6 groups of women from 18 to 70 years of age; married and widows; with and without children; housewives, midwives, students and out-of-school young women. 3 groups of men between 19 and 88 years of age; single and married; with and without children; students, informal sector workers, unemployed. | |
In-depth interviews with young women with abortion experience | Nampula | 9 | 9 | Young women aged 18 to 24 years; single and married; literate and illiterate; with and without children; students and out-of-school. Two had the abortion out of the health facility (HF), and five initiated the abortion in the community and then went to the HF. |
Zambézia | 6 | 6 | Young women and girls aged 15 to 21 years; single and married; with and without children; students. One had the abortion in the HF, three out of the HF, and two initiated the abortion in the community and then went to the HF. |
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Griffin, S.; Melo, M.d.; Picardo, J.J.; Sheehy, G.; Madsen, E.; Matine, J.; Dijkerman, S. The Role of Gender Norms in Shaping Adolescent Girls’ and Young Women’s Experiences of Pregnancy and Abortion in Mozambique. Adolescents 2023, 3, 343-365. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents3020024
Griffin S, Melo Md, Picardo JJ, Sheehy G, Madsen E, Matine J, Dijkerman S. The Role of Gender Norms in Shaping Adolescent Girls’ and Young Women’s Experiences of Pregnancy and Abortion in Mozambique. Adolescents. 2023; 3(2):343-365. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents3020024
Chicago/Turabian StyleGriffin, Sally, Málica de Melo, Joelma Joaquim Picardo, Grace Sheehy, Emily Madsen, Jorge Matine, and Sally Dijkerman. 2023. "The Role of Gender Norms in Shaping Adolescent Girls’ and Young Women’s Experiences of Pregnancy and Abortion in Mozambique" Adolescents 3, no. 2: 343-365. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents3020024
APA StyleGriffin, S., Melo, M. d., Picardo, J. J., Sheehy, G., Madsen, E., Matine, J., & Dijkerman, S. (2023). The Role of Gender Norms in Shaping Adolescent Girls’ and Young Women’s Experiences of Pregnancy and Abortion in Mozambique. Adolescents, 3(2), 343-365. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents3020024