1. Introduction
Approximately 16 million adolescents aged 15 to 19 become pregnant each year, constituting 11% of all births worldwide [
1]. Despite rates of adolescent fertility declining globally in recent decades [
1,
2,
3,
4], teen pregnancies, births, and their associated negative outcomes remain serious problems in many countries. Complications during pregnancy and childbirth are consistently the second cause of death for girls aged 15 to 19 years old [
1]. Babies of teen mothers are 50% more likely to be stillborn, die early, or develop acute and long-term health problems. Young girls who become pregnant are at high risk of abridged education [
5], and thus limited economic prospects [
1,
2]. These and other negative outcomes of early childbearing in the well-being of young mothers and their children have resulted in heightened international efforts to identify sources of risk and protective factors, and to reduce adolescent pregnancy [
1,
2]
Teen pregnancy, regarded as a significant problem in many Western nations for several decades, has emerged only recently as a social problem in Vietnam because of the centuries-old tradition of arranged early marriage. Folk poems (Ca Dao) portray young girls who are married at age 12 or 13, and become unprepared mothers of five children by the time they are 18 [
6]. Today, however, as Vietnam experiences rapid cultural shifts in the context of increasing globalization, this once half-mocking, half-endearing image of 18-year-old mothers of multiple children has taken on an entirely different meaning: one of shame, failure, and anxiety, not only for the young girls, but also for their families and larger society.
The rates of teen pregnancy and births in Vietnam compare favorably to neighboring and other low- and middle-income countries. According to the World Bank, birth rates per 1000 teenagers aged 15–19 in Vietnam fluctuated between 1980 and 2013, rising steadily from 20 per 1000 to 34 between 1980 and 1992, then declining to 28 in 2002. Rates rose again to 32 in 2007 before declining slightly to 30 in 2011, and 29 in 2013 [
7]. These rates were lower than those of regional neighbors Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia, and Thailand, but higher than in Asia (with the exception of China) [
7,
8].
While data about teen pregnancy can be approximated using the national birth registration system, it is impossible to gauge precisely the prevalence of teen pregnancy in Vietnam because of its associated stigma. An alternate way of estimating rates of teen pregnancy is by using data on abortions, which indicate that about 20% of the 300,000 abortions performed annually in Vietnam involve teenagers [
9,
10]; thus, it is possible that the actual incidence of pregnancy among teens is higher than official birth data suggest [
9,
10,
11].
As elsewhere, teen pregnancy in Vietnam should be understood and addressed in its particular historical and socio-cultural context. Teenagers becoming pregnant outside of marriage embodies nuanced interactions between two significant social transformations in Vietnamese society: the emergence of teenagers as an unprecedented distinct social group [
12,
13,
14], and a quiet “sexual revolution” occurring in Vietnam, both of which accompany modernization and globalization [
15,
16]. Nguyen [
12,
13,
14] suggests that since the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, the concept of adolescence in Vietnam has gone through three distinct phases corresponding to three political-social-economic phases of the country: adolescents as miniature communists (1975–1986); adolescents characterized by romantic sentiments, puberty, and identity search (1986–1995); and adolescents as the new “teen Viet” and vanguards of capitalist consumption (1996–2005). These distinct conceptualizations of adolescence influenced thoughts, attitudes, and behaviors of each respective cohort of Vietnamese adolescents, especially in relation to their sexuality.
Despite inconclusive data documenting adolescent pregnancy in Vietnam, the frequent practice of “underground” abortions contributes to a common public perception that since having sex during teenage years is becoming a norm among young people without being fully informed about sexual behaviors, unwanted teen pregnancy is increasing. Vietnamese government officials increasingly use words such as “alarming”, “trouble”, or “challenge” to talk about teen pregnancy, citing a steady rise in the annual number and incidence of teen pregnancies from 2.9% in 2009 to 3.2% in 2012, with 20% of all abortion cases in Vietnam being teenagers [
17,
18]. In popular media, stories about pregnant teenagers are often narrated with a melodramatic tone, adding to the anxiety of the larger Vietnamese society regarding sexual behavior among adolescents who are exposed to an unprecedented influx of Western sexual norms. Between public alarm over teenagers’ sexual behavior and the relative lack of scientific data on adolescent pregnancy, there is little reliable knowledge about the incidence of teen pregnancy, and patterns of differential risk of and protection from early conception in contemporary Vietnam.
This study aims to address this gap in knowledge by examining the prevalence of and selected factors associated with teen pregnancy in Vietnam. Two broad questions were asked: what is the prevalence of teen pregnancy in contemporary Vietnam; and what selected social, family, and individual factors are associated with teen pregnancy in Vietnam? The study utilized two national surveys conducted in 2003 and 2008 to answer the two research questions within the context of fast political, economic, and social change in Vietnam in the last two decades.
3. Methods
This study was designed to examine not only what selected factors predict teen pregnancy among Vietnamese youth, but also whether there have been changes in the risk factors attending the larger socio-cultural changes that come with modernization and globalization. The research uses secondary data analysis drawing upon the two waves (2003 and 2008) of samples from the Vietnam Survey Assessment of Vietnamese Youth (VNSAVY). VNSAVY is the largest and most comprehensive survey in Vietnam to examine health and well-being among Vietnamese youth and young adults, and is funded by the World Health Organization (WHO). The first VNSAVY (VNSAVY1) was conducted in 2003 with 7584 youths aged between 14 and 25 years living in 42 out of 63 provinces of Vietnam. The second VNSAVY (VNSAVY2) was conducted in 2008 with 10,004 youths aged between 14 and 25 in all 63 provinces and cities of Vietnam. This paper utilizes VNSAVY subsamples that include teenage girls, ages 14 to 19 years old. Our analytic sample sizes includes 2325 teenagers for VNSAVY1 (30.7% of the overall sample) and 3287 teenagers for VNSAVY2 (32.7% of the overall sample).
3.1. Variables
Teenage pregnancy. Teenage pregnancy was measured by the item “Have you ever been pregnant”, which was asked of all female respondents regardless of their age. The answer options included Yes (1) and No (0).
Demographic backgrounds. The variables that captured the demographic information of the samples included age, ethnicity, education attainment, urban residency, and household ownership. Age was a continuous variable that ranged from 14 to 19 years old. However, as teenage pregnancy was distributed unevenly across age, we further binarily coded the age variable into “at or below 17 years-old”
vs. “18 or 19 years old”. Because the sample sizes for ethnic minority groups were small, the variable “ethnicity” was recorded into Kinh and other ethnicities (Kinh: 0
vs. Others: 1), despite the fact there are more than five ethnicity groups in Vietnam. Educational attainment was also dichotomized (Less than high school: 0
vs. High school or higher: 1). Urban residency was a binary variable (Rural: 0
vs. Urban: 1). Finally, to capture the economic status of teenaged girls’ families, a composite score was created to summarize how many household items the teenage girls’ families owned. These household items were on a list of 11 household items, such as a car, refrigerator, cell phone, and other common household goods. A boat, however, was originally listed on both waves of the survey but was later omitted due to additional analysis on its psychometric properties. The H coefficient of this item in the Mokken Scale analysis was lower than 0.3, representing the inability to measure this particular item with the rest of the items [
43,
44,
45]. The Internet item was added in the 2008 VNSAVY survey, and was incorporated into the computation of household ownerships to reflect the rapid changes in Vietnamese households during this time period. To assist in comparisons across waves, the composite scores were further divided by the number of items incorporated in calculation for each wave of the survey (ten items in VNSAVY1 and 11 items in VNSAVY2). The composite scores in both waves ranged from 0 to 1, with higher scores representing greater proportions of listed items owned by the households.
Parental divorce. Parental divorce was computed by two items in both waves of VNSAVY. If a respondent answered “divorce” to either of the items “The reasons your biological father does not live with you” or “The reasons your biological mother does not live with you”, she would be considered having experienced parental divorce. The variable parental divorce was binaurally coded (No: 0 vs. Yes: 1).
Sexual education by parent and at school. The variables “sexual education by parent” and “sexual education at school” were computed by a set of related items; however, the item formats were slightly changed between the two waves of the survey. In VNSAVY1, a multiple-choice item asked respondents to select from which sources they “heard about the following topics, including family planning, pregnancy/menstruation, gender and sexual relationships, and love and marriage”. The item listed 16 potential sources and asked respondents to select all that applied. The variable “sexual education by parent” was coded 1 if either “father” or “mother” was selected. The variable “sexual education at school” was coded 1 if respondents selected “teachers” in their responses. In contrast, in VNSAVY2 the four different topics listed above were probed in separate items. These four items asked respondents to name the top three information sources. The variable “sexual education by parent” was coded 1 if either “father” or “mother” was selected for any of the four topics. Similarly, the variable “sexual education at school” was coded 1 if respondents selected “teachers” in their responses for any of the four topics. Therefore, both variables, sexual education by parent and at school, were binaurally coded (No: 0 vs. Any: 1).
Internet use. Internet use was measured by one item in both waves of the survey question “Did you ever use the internet?” (No: 0 vs. Yes: 1).
Domestic violence. Domestic violence was captured by a set of related items in both datasets. If a respondent answered yes to either of the items “Have you ever been injured as a result of violence from a family member?” or “Has your spouse done any of the following things to you, including yelling, prohibiting you from doing certain things, and hitting”, the variable “domestic violence” would be coded 1. The variable “domestic violence” was binaurally coded (Never: 0 vs. Any: 1).
Early sexual debut. Early sexual debut was measured by an item that asked at which age the respondents had their first sexual experiences. In the local Vietnamese context, we defined early sexual debut as having their first sexual experience at age 17 or younger. Teenage girls who have not had any sexual experiences would be considered not having early sexual debut. The variable early sexual debut was binaurally coded as a result (No: 0 vs. Yes: 1).
Positive outlook. Positive outlook was measured by a set of 10 related items in both waves of the survey; however, due to low overall reliability, six items were selected to compute the composite scores that optimized the reliability. The final reliabilities were 0.68 and 0.66 for wave one and wave two surveys, respectively. A few sampled items read “I have a few good qualities”, “I will have a happy family in the future”, and “I will have opportunities to do what I want”. Respondents could answer “disagree” (1); “partially agree” (2); and “agree” (3) to each item. The composite score was a continuous variable and ranged from 1 to 3, with higher scores representing greater positive outlook.
Depressive symptomatology. Five related items were selected to measure the depressive symptomatology among the teenage girls. Sampled items read “Have you ever felt so sad or helpless that you stopped doing your usual activities?” and “Have you ever felt really hopeless about your future?” The respondents answered “Yes” (1) or “No” (0) to each item. A composite score was created to sum up the six items. Additional Mokken Scale analysis suggested that the average H coefficients of these items were greater than 0.3 in both waves of survey, indicating these items were scalable to form an index measuring depressive symptomatology among Vietnamese youths [
43,
44,
45].
Negative peer norms. Seven related items were used to measure perceived negative peer norms among Vietnamese teenage girls. Sample questions read “Is there any pressure from your friends for you to do the following: smoking” and “Is there any pressure from your friends for you to do the following: trying drugs”. Respondents could answer “no pressure” (1); “a little pressure” (2); and “some pressure” (3) to each item. The reliability of these items in both waves of survey was very satisfactory (Cronbach’s alphas = 0.90 and 0.87 in VNSAVY1 and VNSAVY2, respectively). A composite score was created that averaged the scores over the seven items. The composite score was a continuous variable ranging from 1 to 3, with higher values representing greater levels of perceived negative peer norms.
Positive peer norms. Similar seven related items were used to measure perceived positive peer norms among Vietnamese teenage girls. Sampled questions read “Do your friends encourage you to avoid smoking” and “Do your friends encourage you to avoid trying drugs”. Respondents could answer “Yes” (1) or “No” (0) to each item. The reliability of these items in both waves of survey was very satisfactory (Cronbach’s alphas = 0.93 and 0.94 in Waves 1 and 2, respectively). A composite score was created that averaged the scores over the seven items. The composite score was a continuous variable ranging from 0 to 1, with higher values representing greater levels of perceived positive peer norms.
3.2. Analytic Approaches
Descriptive statistics were first applied to estimate the prevalence rates of pregnancy as well as distributions of selected variables among Vietnamese teenage girls in both cohorts. Wald tests were utilized to evaluate differences in prevalence rates of pregnancy and distributions of selected variables across two waves of the survey. A logistic regression model was further applied in both waves of the survey to estimate the relationships between teenage pregnancy and selected variables within each cohort of teenage girls. Finally, Wald tests were used again to compare the estimated relationships across waves. To better account for complex study designs, survey weights were applied throughout the analyses. Jackknife was applied to calculate the standard errors for statistical inferences. Domain analysis was applied because in this study, only teenage girls aged 14 to 19 were included. All the statistical computations were carried out in a commercial software package, Stata 13, with SVY procedure [
46].
5. Discussion
Results of this study show that the prevalence of pregnancy among Vietnamese teenagers in the national surveys conducted in 2003 and 2008 was stable at 4%, or 40 pregnancies per 1000 adolescent girls aged 14 to 19. When VNSAVY2 was conducted in 2008, rates in Vietnam were lower than in less-developed Asian countries, such as Laos, Bangladesh, and Timor Lester, and higher than in highly westernized Asian countries such as Singapore, Japan, and Hong Kong [
19]. Overall, Vietnam’s rate of teen pregnancy is significantly lower than that of Sub-Saharan African countries, but is significantly higher than in most Western European countries (with the exception of England) and, notably, higher than the U.S. [
2,
4,
47].
Although rates of teen pregnancy in Vietnam were similar in 2003 and 2008, there are important differences between the pregnant teens in these two cohorts. Age, experience of domestic violence, and early sexual debut were positively correlated with higher odds of teenage pregnancy for both cohorts; however, ethnicity, educational attainment, sexual education at school, Internet use, and depressive symptomatology were significantly related to teenage pregnancy only in the 2008 cohort. In 2003, teenagers who became pregnant tended to live in families with a history of domestic violence, started having sex earlier than their peers, and became pregnant between the ages of 15 and 18. They were also more likely to live in urban areas and did not receive sex education from their families or at school. In many ways, the profile of pregnant teenagers in Vietnam in the 2003 cohort resembled that of disadvantaged youth in poor urban neighborhoods in developed countries.
The pregnant teenagers in 2008 also reported a history of domestic violence but were more likely to be living in rural and/or remote mountainous areas. They did not have access to the Internet, tended to have lower levels of education, received little or no sex education at school, and reported depressive symptoms. Within the larger category of rural pregnant teens, they seemed to fall into two distinct sub-groups. One group consisted of teenagers from ethnic minorities, likely living in isolated mountainous areas where they had to travel far to attend school, and where they worked in the fields to help their parents earn a living. Since it was difficult for them to go to school, many of them eventually dropped out and began working full-time in the fields. They married in their late teens and subsequently became pregnant. For these teenagers, getting pregnant at 16 or 17 would not necessarily be problematic, but rather resulted from the normative expectations of traditional ethnic minorities living in the high mountains. The other group of pregnant teenagers in the 2008 cohort consisted primarily of young women who were not members of an ethnic minority, but also lived in rural, economically disadvantaged areas, and faced barriers to obtaining general education, including sex education. These young women might also consider early marriage and childbearing as normative in rural areas rather than a social problem.
The differences found between Vietnamese pregnant teenagers in 2003 and in 2008 paralleled differences in the general characteristics of teenagers, embedded in larger political, economic, and social changes of Vietnam in the last two decades. Within the five years that separated the two surveys, Vietnam experienced significant sociocultural shifts; thus, the two cohorts of teenagers were exposed to very different political, economic, and social contexts. Teenagers in the 2003 cohort came of age in the late 1990s and early 2000s, which was the beginning of globalization in Vietnam. At that time, only 3% of the population used the Internet, which was available only in urban areas [
48]. Consequently, teenagers did not have direct access to foreign sources, news, or other information available by 2008. However, through pervasive distribution of teen magazines, newspapers (such as
Hoa Hoc Tro), and national television and radio programs, Vietnamese teenagers in 2003 received a rather unified exposure to Western culture, particularly American teen culture [
13,
14]. During the early 2000s, the English term “teen” was first borrowed from the American media and appeared in the most influential newspapers targeting adolescents in Vietnam [
14]. It first appeared in 2001 in
Hoa Hoc Tro, and quickly spread to become a household word denoting a new social group in Vietnam: the “teen Viet”. Thus, the youth coming of age in the late 1990s and early 2000s were the first generation exposed to the idea that the teenage years represented a distinct culture characterized by consumption, and accentuating one’s identity through bodily beauty and accessories. This was also the first time that Vietnamese teenagers were exposed to the idea that being “sexy” was “cool”, rather than being an indicator of immorality or a barrier to academic achievement as in the past [
14].
In contrast, the 2008 cohort included those who came of age when important aspects of globalization began to influence the daily life of Vietnamese. Only five years after 2003, the number of Internet users in Vietnam had increased seven times to nearly 21 million users, making Vietnam one of the fastest-growing countries in Internet use [
48]. The Internet became ubiquitous in urban areas and much more accessible in rural areas, with young people between 14 and 24 accounting for nearly 40% of the users [
49]. As a result, changes in teen culture often started in urban areas and diffused to rural and remote areas in the manner of circles and waves.
The outward exodus of teen pregnancy observed in this study might have been the result of a ripple effect of urbanization, modernization, and westernization in Vietnam, both in terms of socioeconomic improvement and cultural shifts. In particular, between the years 2003 and 2008, the average income in urban areas grew twice as much as that in rural areas [
50]. For remote areas, the gap is even bigger. In fact, in many remote areas in Vietnam, living conditions have remained virtually unchanged over the last few decades. Malnutrition rates among ethnic minority children are twice those of the Kinh people. Only 13% of the two largest ethnic minority groups in Vietnam attend junior high school compared to 65% of the two majority groups [
50].
The fact that urban Vietnamese youths stay in school longer compared to those in rural and/or mountainous areas might make urban youths delay marriage and childbearing. As a result, these youth become more careful in their sexual risk-taking. At the same time, improved economic conditions have led to an explosion in Internet access, which provides teenagers with easy and unprecedented access to a means of satisfying their sexual curiosity, as well as learning about risky sexual behaviors. The significance of this development is suggested by results of the final report of VNSAVY 1, which shows that Vietnamese teenagers used the mass media as a primary source of information, especially when it came to issues related to friendship, romantic relationships, and sexuality [
38].
Urbanization, modernization, and westernization have also led to an import of Western sexual norms, including teenagers becoming more accepting of pre-marital sex. Through Western movies, news, music, and social media, Vietnamese teenagers in urban areas have learned that it is normal for teenagers in the Western world to have sex while in high school. They also have learned the negative consequences associated with teen pregnancy, even if they did not obtain comprehensive knowledge about safe sex. At the same time, young Vietnamese people are acutely aware that their parents and grandparents, indoctrinated with communist and Confucian ideologies that pre-marital sex is immoral and ruined the future of young women, strongly oppose such practices. As a result, urban teenagers quickly absorbed Western sexual norms but also the benefits of informal sex education. In contrast to urban areas, rural and remote/mountainous areas are slow to benefit from economic improvement and the import of Western sexual norms, as they still preserve traditional customs of early marriage and motherhood. Such unequal patterns of change are evident in the expanding income inequality between urban and rural areas in Vietnam, with poverty currently concentrating on ethnic minorities living in mountainous areas [
50] (World Bank, 2014).
6. Implications
What are the implication of these shifts in the differential risk of teen pregnancy in Vietnam? Studies have consistently shown that children born to teen mothers are more likely to develop short-term and long-term negative health outcomes. Teen mothers are living primarily in rural and/or remote mountainous areas where there are limited health resources. As a result, Vietnam should develop new formal and informal services in rural areas to support teen mothers. At the same time, teen mothers who are following the traditional patterns of their communities in becoming mothers at young ages might not feel marginalized or stigmatized, and do not wish to seek services available to them. Moreover, Vietnamese children are often raised and cared for by the whole extended family or village; this would result in an informal support system for young mothers. This might mean that Vietnam needs a comprehensive intervention plan that addresses not only the socioeconomic but also the cultural and religious factors that lead to teen pregnancy and motherhood. Vietnam may also need long-term community-based intervention programs that employ local people (commune health staff, village elders, local monks/nuns/priests/spiritual leaders) rather than Western public health campaigns and measures. Promoting education and developing strong, focused sex education programs at schools in rural and/or mountainous areas may be important as well.
The above findings suggest that Vietnam might face challenges in reducing teen pregnancy in the years to come if there remain social, economic, and cultural segregation in the country; thus, for Vietnam to reduce teen pregnancy, there must be localized as well as large-scale national strategies to improve overall socio-economic conditions in all geographic regions in the country.
Limitations and Future Research
This study has several limitations. First, data of the study are cross-sectional, which limits the ability to establish a causal direction between independent variables and dependent variables. Second, the survey questionnaires used for the two waves were worded slightly differently in a few items, thus participants might have responded differently depending on their interpretation. In particular, for the 2008 survey, sex education at schools was incorporated under the umbrella item of “sex education through formal channels”, which also included formal public health propaganda in the mass media, and neighborhood-based health education. As a result, researchers were not sure about the unique impact of sex education at schools on teen pregnancy for the 2008 cohort. We were also unable to establish whether or not the pregnant teens were married because of the ways the survey questions on pregnancy and marital status were structured. However, teen pregnancy rates were almost zero through age 17 and very high at ages 18 and 19, indicating that pregnancies among Vietnamese teenage girls might be marital. Most significantly, there could be under-reporting about teen pregnancy by survey participants due to the stigma associated with engaging in sexual activity at early ages, and pregnancy during adolescence. However, even with these limitations, the study yields insights that are helpful in understanding teen pregnancy in the context of the fast and profound changes in Vietnam. Future studies can address these limitations and combine quantitative research with qualitative research in order to allow in-depth understanding of teen pregnancy from the Vietnamese teenagers’ viewpoint.