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. 2022 Feb 14;44:101289. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101289

Table 2.

Estimates and correlates identified in quantitative evaluations of mental health among pregnant adolescents and young women in sub-Saharan Africa (N = 8).

Author, year published, Country Study design, sample size Estimates and correlates identified Key findings Conclusions about gaps in mental health service Delivery Bioecological level(s) identified
Ayamolowo et al. (2019), Nigeria2 Cross-sectional study; 13–19 year old pregnant and breastfeeding adolescents (N = 120) Moderate perceived social support: 54·2%
Low perceived social support: 1 2·5%
Severe depression: 10·0%
Correlation between respondents' level of social support and depression at r=- 0·510, P=<0·0001
Significant association between perceived social support and development of depression among population. Need for community health information, education and programs to support and reduce negative mental health outcomes among the population. Individual
Babafemi et al. (2012), Nigeria3 Cross-sectional study; 13–19 year old pregnant and breastfeeding adolescents; N = 300 (N = 150 pregnant, N = 150 postpartum) Depression and anxiety:
During pregnancy: 27·3%
After pregnancy: 59·0%
After childbirth and now: 13·7%
Poor psychosocial support during pregnancy: 35·7%
Poor psychosocial support during breastfeeding: 16·7%
Generally, 49·3% who received poor psychosocial support either during pregnancy or breastfeeding also experienced poor health while 17·7% who got good psychosocial support at those times also experienced good health.
Health and psychosocial problems of adolescent pregnancy include low education, poverty, limited job opportunities, depression, and high blood pressure
Attention of nurses, health education, conventional education, economic status etc. correlate to increased health status and ability of the pregnant adolescent to cope with pregnancy related stress Individual
Dare et al. (2016), Nigeria7 Cross-sectional study;
13–18-year-old pregnant adolescent girls and young women (AGYW);
N = 100
(N = 33 pregnant;
N = 67 never pregnant)
Depression (n = 31, 93·9%);
Substance abuse (n = 28, 84·8%);
School dropout (n = 24, 72·7%); Abandonment by friends (n = 24, 72·7%);
Rejection by parents/relatives (n = 22, 66·7%);
Rejection by
church/mosque (n = 17, 51·5%);
Stigmatization by the community (n = 22, 66·7%);
Suicide attempts (n = 18, 54·5%)”
Poverty is a major factor causing adolescent pregnancy
Need for sex education in schools,
improved access to health services and staff who understand adolescents and their needs
Individual
Microsystem
Govender et al. (2020), South Africa6 Cross-sectional study 13–19 year old pregnant and postpartum adolescents; N = 326 Depressive symptoms (EPDS ≥13): 11·7%
Among pregnant adolescents: 15·9%
Among postpartum adolescents: 8·8%
Experiences of physical, sexual, and verbal abuse were associated with risk of depression (p<0·05)
Prevalence of antenatal depression is higher than postpartum depression. Physical violence, verbal abuse, and absence of partner support associated with antenatal and postpartum depression. Need to integrate MH needs and MH screening into reproductive health program packages. Microsystem
Kimbui et al. (2018), Kenya10 Cross-sectional study;
14–18-year-old pregnant AGYW
N = 212
(N = 106 16–17 years old, N = 106 18 years old)
Depressive symptoms (EPDS: ≥8): 60·4%; Severe depression (BDI): 51·9%;
Currently consuming alcohol: 26·9%;
“Of the 110 pregnant adolescents who were severely depressed, 39 were currently consuming alcohol.”
Suggested correlation between depression and substance abuse in adolescents Need to develop culturally relevant systemic interventions for the population. Individual
Oladeji et al. (2019), Nigeria14 Cohort study; N = 9352 (N = 772 pregnant adolescents ≤19 years old, N = 8580 adult pregnant women) Depression (EPDS score ≥ 12): 17·7% (15–19 year olds).
6·9% (≥19 year olds, 0·082)
Adjustment and attitudes to pregnancy (mean MAMA score): 21·8% (15–19 year olds). 19·8% (≥19 year olds, <0·001)
Perinatal depression more common and associated with poorer maternal attitudes and parenting skills in pregnant adolescents than in pregnant adults Need to supplement depression interventions in pregnancy to improve parenting skills. Microsystem
Osok et al. (2018, 2), Kenya16 Cross-sectional study; N = 176 pregnant adolescents (age 15–18)
Mild-to-severe depressive symptoms (score ≥5): 78·4%;Severe depressive symptoms (score ≥15): 15·9%;Correlates of depressive symptoms:
  • -

    Younger age

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    Unemployed

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    Single

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    Living with parents

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    Low social support

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    Experiencing stressful event

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    Substance abuse

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    Experiencing domestic violence

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    HIV-positive diagnosis

Risk factors for depression include: having experienced an adverse event or extremely stressful life context, living with HIV/AIDS, absence of support from the partner or family and being a younger adolescent Need to integrate WHO's Mental Health Treatment Gap Action Program (known as WHO mhGAP) in the healthcare settings for pregnant adolescents Individual
Microsystem
Exosystem
Wong et al. (2017), South Africa18 Cross-sectional study; N = 625 (18–24 year old postpartum AGYW, ≥25 year old postpartum women) Depression: 11%
Self-harming thoughts: 6% (18–24 year olds: 11%; >24 year olds: 4%, p-value= 0·002)
Risky alcohol use: 16%
Alcohol-related harm: 21% (18–24 year olds: 37%; >24 year olds: 20%, p-value= 0·02)
Young HIV-infected pregnant women more likely to report depressive symptoms and self-harming thoughts compared to older women with the youngest women reported the highest levels of alcohol-related harm Need for interventions for the population Individual