New Delhi:Three out of every five child brides, surveyed as part of a study across four states, went through teenage pregnancy, a new report has claimed. The report by NGO Child Rights and You (CRY) said under-age marriage has a detrimental impact on girls' sexual and reproductive health (SRH) as majority of them become mothers before attaining adulthood.
The study was conducted in 40 villages of eight blocks from four districts namely Chittoor, Chandouli, Parbhani, and Kandhamal in Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra and Odisha. The study was conducted on the occasion of Children's Day and Child Safety Week (November 14 to 20). The study claimed that only 16 per cent parents and parents-in-law and 34 per cent of child brides or grooms are aware of the negative consequences of child marriage.
While the study highlighted social norms and practices majorly influencing perception of under-age marriage in the society, it said other factors contributing to child marriage were extreme poverty, forced migration and gender inequity. The findings also implied that lack of educational opportunities due to issues of accessibility, availability and affordability pushes girls to drop out of school, leaving them far more vulnerable to child marriage in comparison to boys.
Fear of girls eloping or having a "love affair" leading to premarital sex and pregnancy emerged as dominant reasons why parents prefer to marry off their daughters as soon as they reach puberty, the study claimed. Lower dowry, the patriarchal construct of 'women's honour', finding grooms and adaptation by girls being easier in new households too are reasons behind high prevalence of child marriage, the study suggests.
Puja Marwaha, the CEO of CRY said the study aimed to understand the prevailing knowledge, attitudes, practices and social behaviour regarding child marriage as well as to document nuanced initiatives taken at the community levels to challenge child marriage practices. "The study also tried to map the convergence of community and government systems under the available provisions and practices to determine the scope for synergies at both ends," Marwaha said.
Going by the findings of the study, child marriage has a detrimental impact on girls' sexual and reproductive health as the majority of them become mothers before attaining adulthood, thus being exposed to high-risk pregnancy, it said. More than half of the women respondents 51 per cent of child brides with at least two children, stated that the gap between their first and second child was less than two years, while 59 per cent of child brides stated to have experienced teenage pregnancy, it said.
A sizable proportion of adolescent mothers reported having given birth to babies with low birth weight. According to the study, 17 per cent and 16 per cent of child brides reported having babies with low birth weight for their first and second child, respectively. The study found that cases of child marriage in Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Odisha were still prevalent, even though there has been some decline in a number of cases over the past few years as observed by duty bearers and community members.