News
Study shows young women would rather get Aids than fall pregnant
More teenagers are growing up without sex education since schools, parents and religious organisation find the subject a taboo. Left on their own, the young adults rely on information gathered at such discotheques from friends. Photo/ FILE
Posted Monday, December 21 2009 at 22:00
In Summary
- Young women using emergency pill far more regularly than recommended
When it comes to choosing emergency contraception, young Kenyan women trust their schoolmates. They also trust the chemist, the Internet and their boyfriends.
The only people they don’t trust are their parents
One word explains why a 25-year-old woman we’ll call Jane lowers her face in shame when explaining why she had unprotected sex with a man she had known for only a month.
Trusted him
“I trusted him,” Jane says, averting her eyes and squirming uncomfortably in her seat. The next morning, the enormity of her decision sank in — what if she got pregnant? She was still in college and definitely not equipped to raise a child.
Her new boyfriend came up with the solution — “Just swallow the ‘morning-after pill’ and you will have nothing to worry about,” he advised, even offering to dash to the chemist for her.
For Jane, the suggestion to use emergency contraception proved a “magic bullet” of sorts.
“Since I did not get pregnant that first time, I continued using the E-pill each time I had unprotected sex, which was at least once a week, convinced that I could not get pregnant,” she recalls.
A month later, however, that “magic bullet” took a wrong turn. Jane’s worst fear came to pass — she was pregnant and devastated.
“I just wasn’t ready to handle a pregnancy or worse, become someone’s mother. There was still so much that I wanted to do, so much that I wanted to accomplish…” Jane says, her voice trailing off.
Jane could easily speak for thousands of young women throughout Kenya.
Pick any 10 in the streets of Nairobi, and at least half admit to having unprotected sex — regularly. They will also tell you they don’t ask their partners about their sexual history, and that they use the E-pill far more often than is recommended.
That’s what the Nation found during an interview for this feature with 10 women between the ages of 19 and 27 years. Far from embodying the non-religious, immoral stereotype, these women were either in college or university, or employed in white-collar jobs.
Overwhelmingly, this group is likely to attribute their risky sexual behaviour to trust — the trust they place on boyfriends to shun sexual partners outside their relationship.
In the same breath, they claim strong awareness of the deadly risk posed by sexually transmitted diseases. These women say they’ve investigated various options for preventing pregnancy, yet place absolute trust in the relatively new E-pill as their contraceptive of choice.
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Submitted by jimmymachariaPosted December 25, 2009 02:18 AM
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Submitted by ahmedfarahmaalim
@khadija123100, you're right. But we don't live in the ideal society and most men couldn't care less about it since they're not the ones who'll be burdened by a pregnancy. They can always deny that a child is their's. Let's be realistic here and encourage women to watch out before they get into trouble.
Posted December 24, 2009 11:44 PM -
Submitted by khadija123100
Thanx Mutuwa123.. All fingers are pointed at the ladies and i wonder who they have sex with. Men are qually responsible and at risk and since they are the ones who use the condoms, why dont we talk to the men and tell them to get a condom before getting a woman.
Posted December 24, 2009 09:06 AM -
Submitted by Phillipmorgan
Its wrong to put common sense before wisdom,one moments spoils a lifetime.Its wrong to imagine what our creator gives us as a source of pleasure and reproduction,is now sourse of painful thoughtless deaths.
Posted December 23, 2009 07:58 PM -
Submitted by vgogero
I blame it all Parental failure and not imaparting of the right knowldege to the youth ,For as the good book says my people perish due to lack of knowldege
Posted December 23, 2009 01:25 PM




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It is a good article like many others. Telling parent’s of their role in sex education yet exonerating itself from the responsibility. The media only talks about sex explicitly and exploitatively say when advertising condoms. Constructive media should break this taboo. Inform people candidly about sex, various methods of contraception, their advantage and disadvantages. That way you empower them to make informed choices.