Population Council Research that makes a difference

Banner photo: Women and children in India.

First-time Parents Project

Council researchers developed and tested an integrated package of health and social interventions to improve young females’ reproductive and sexual health knowledge and practices, and increase their ability to act in their own interests.

Sexual activity among adolescent females in India takes place overwhelmingly within the context of marriage. While age at marriage for girls is increasing in India, as elsewhere in the developing world, early marriage continues to be a significant practice. Nationwide, nearly a fifth of 20–24-year-old girls are married by age 15; close to half are married by age 18 (IIPS and ORC Macro 2007). As many as 30 percent of adolescent girls aged 15–19 are already married, presumably sexually active, and under pressure to bear a first child, while fewer than 10 percent of unmarried girls are reported to be sexually experienced (IIPS and ORC Macro 2007; Jejeebhoy and Sebastian 2004).

Despite the high prevalence of early marriage in India, little is known about the lives of married girls, about the nature of the early years of marriage, and the pressures on young women, and little has been done to support them. Although sexual activity occurs within the socially sanctioned institution of marriage, marriage does not inherently make the sex safe, voluntary, or pleasurable. Nor does the fact that the birth is often desired, expected by the community, or within the marital boundary make childbearing safe for a young first-time mother. In view of this, the Population Council, in partnership with Deepak Charitable Trust in Vadodara and the Child In Need Institute in Kolkata initiated the First-time Parents Project. Findings from this effort fill a significant gap in existing research, providing insight about the situation and needs of recently married and first-time pregnant/postpartum adolescent girls and young women in India as well as insight on the feasibility and effects of the interventions.

This project developed and tested an integrated package of health and social interventions that aimed to improve young females’ reproductive and sexual health knowledge and practices, and increase their ability to act in their own interests. It was derived from the hypothesis that the periods following marriage and surrounding the first birth, though characterized by greater vulnerability, offer a unique and powerful entry point for improving the prospects of young mothers.

Project objectives were to:

  • better understand the social moment and transition of new marriage and a first birth, including the critical role of partners/fathers and other family members in decisionmaking and supportive/detrimental behaviors; and
  • develop and test interventions designed to increase social support to recently married young women and first-time mothers and provide services tailored to address their needs after marriage and during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period.

The intervention, implemented over a two-year period, 2003–2004, comprised three main components: information provision, adjustments in existing health services, and group formation. The interventions were directed to several groups, including newly married young women, young women pregnant for the first time, postpartum first-time mothers, husbands of these young women, mothers and mothers-in-law, and the broader community.

A quasi-experimental, case-control study with quantitative surveys at baseline and endline assessed the effects of the interventions. After controlling for other factors, the First-time Parents Project had significant, positive effects on girls’ autonomy, reproductive health knowledge and practice, and couple relations. The findings from this study are very encouraging—both in exerting significant effects on the lives of married girls and in demonstrating the feasibility of implementing a program for this vulnerable population of girls.

Empowering married young women and improving their sexual and reproductive health: Effects of the First-time Parents Project (PDF
Santhya,K.G.; Haberland,Nicole; Das,Arup; Ram,F.; Sinha,R.K.; Ram,Usha; Mohanty,S.K.
Publication date: 2008


Consent and coercion: Examining unwanted sex among married young women in India
 (abstract) (PDF
Santhya,K.G.; Haberland,Nicole; Ram,F.; Sinha,R.K.; Mohanty,S.K.
International Family Planning Perspectives 33(3): 124-132
Publication date: 2007


Empowering young mothers in India: Results of the First-time Parents Project (PDF
Santhya,K.G.; Haberland,Nicole
Promoting Healthy, Safe, and Productive Transitions to Adulthood Brief (no. 8)
Publication date: 2007


Marriage and motherhood: An exploratory study of the social and reproductive health status of married young women in Gujarat and West Bengal (PDF
Ram,F.; Sinha,Ranjana; Mohanty,S.K.; Das,Arup; Lakhani,Aruna; Haberland,Nicole; Santhya,K.G.
Publication date: 2006


Meeting the health and social needs of married girls in India: The First Time Parents Project's implementation and reach (PDF
Update, (October)
Publication date: 2006


Early marriage and adolescent girls (PDF
Haberland,Nicole; Chong,Erica; Bracken,Hillary J.; Parker,Chris
YouthLens on Reproductive Health and HIV/AIDS (no. 15)
Publication date: 2005


Married adolescents: A review of programmes (PDF
Graft,Auralice; Haberland,Nicole; Goldberg,Rachel E.
Paper prepared for the WHO/UNFPA/Population Council Technical Consultation on Married Adolescents
Publication date: 2004


 

Project Stats

Location: India (Two sites in West Bengal and Gujarat) 

Program(s): Poverty, Gender, and Youth 

Topic(s): Adolescence/transitions to adulthood
Child marriage
Integrating health services
Quality of care

Duration: 1/2003 - 1/2005

Population Council researchers:
Nicole Haberland
K.G. Santhya

Non-Council collaborators:
Child in Need Institute, Kolkata
Deepak Charitable Trust, Vadodara

Donors:
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
The Summit Foundation
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
UK Department for International Development

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