“Trying not to be seen”: a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls’ experiences seeking antenatal care in a Nairobi informal settlement

Background Adolescent girls living in low-income urban informal settlements face unique challenges that elevate their susceptibility to early childbearing. However, there has been limited research attention, especially qualitative studies, on their use or non-use of antenatal care (ANC) services. In...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anthony Idowu Ajayi, Caroline W Kabiru, Anne Achieng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-06-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/6/e093696.full
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850232221737156608
author Anthony Idowu Ajayi
Caroline W Kabiru
Anne Achieng
author_facet Anthony Idowu Ajayi
Caroline W Kabiru
Anne Achieng
author_sort Anthony Idowu Ajayi
collection DOAJ
description Background Adolescent girls living in low-income urban informal settlements face unique challenges that elevate their susceptibility to early childbearing. However, there has been limited research attention, especially qualitative studies, on their use or non-use of antenatal care (ANC) services. Informed by the socioecological theory, we examined the obstacles to and facilitators of ANC services use among pregnant adolescent girls in a low-income urban informal settlement in Kenya.Methods The study adopted a qualitative explanatory design. We purposively selected 22 adolescent girls aged 13–19 who were either pregnant or had given birth, 10 parents and three health providers to participate in individual interviews. We employed inductive and deductive thematic analyses informed by socioecological theory to explain the barriers to enablers of antenatal services use among pregnant adolescent girls in low-income informal settlements.Findings Most adolescent girls interviewed faced barriers at multiple socioecological levels, resulting in delayed ANC initiation and fragmented engagement with services. At the intrapersonal level, girls grappled with internalised stigma and late pregnancy recognition and acceptance, often dismissing early signs due to fear or denial. Their young age and limited knowledge of maternal health left them terrified in fear, caught between societal judgement and the daunting prospect of confronting their condition. At the interpersonal level, societal stigma and discrimination pushed many into secrecy, hindering their access to antenatal services. However, parents, other family members, and health providers played a key role in enabling access to care by offering various forms of support to pregnant girls, including offering counselling and accompanying girls to clinics. At the organisational level, user fees and condescending health providers’ attitudes hindered ANC use. Yet, good patient-provider communication, privacy and confidentiality played a key role in enabling ANC attendance.Conclusion Pregnant adolescent girls face unique challenges that prevent them from accessing ANC early and completing the recommended number of visits. These challenges range from intrapersonal factors to interpersonal and organisational factors. Programmes to improve early initiation of ANC for pregnant adolescents should include interventions that address the social stigma associated with early and unintended pregnancy, promote family support and make health facilities responsive to the needs of pregnant girls.
format Article
id doaj-art-2f73ce4b09da404ba01fa0b8fb292aba
institution OA Journals
issn 2044-6055
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format Article
series BMJ Open
spelling doaj-art-2f73ce4b09da404ba01fa0b8fb292aba2025-08-20T02:03:16ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552025-06-0115610.1136/bmjopen-2024-093696“Trying not to be seen”: a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls’ experiences seeking antenatal care in a Nairobi informal settlementAnthony Idowu Ajayi0Caroline W Kabiru1Anne Achieng2SRMNCAH, African Population and Health Research Center, Nairobi, KenyaSRMNCAH, African Population and Health Research Center, Nairobi, KenyaSRMNCAH, African Population and Health Research Center, Nairobi, KenyaBackground Adolescent girls living in low-income urban informal settlements face unique challenges that elevate their susceptibility to early childbearing. However, there has been limited research attention, especially qualitative studies, on their use or non-use of antenatal care (ANC) services. Informed by the socioecological theory, we examined the obstacles to and facilitators of ANC services use among pregnant adolescent girls in a low-income urban informal settlement in Kenya.Methods The study adopted a qualitative explanatory design. We purposively selected 22 adolescent girls aged 13–19 who were either pregnant or had given birth, 10 parents and three health providers to participate in individual interviews. We employed inductive and deductive thematic analyses informed by socioecological theory to explain the barriers to enablers of antenatal services use among pregnant adolescent girls in low-income informal settlements.Findings Most adolescent girls interviewed faced barriers at multiple socioecological levels, resulting in delayed ANC initiation and fragmented engagement with services. At the intrapersonal level, girls grappled with internalised stigma and late pregnancy recognition and acceptance, often dismissing early signs due to fear or denial. Their young age and limited knowledge of maternal health left them terrified in fear, caught between societal judgement and the daunting prospect of confronting their condition. At the interpersonal level, societal stigma and discrimination pushed many into secrecy, hindering their access to antenatal services. However, parents, other family members, and health providers played a key role in enabling access to care by offering various forms of support to pregnant girls, including offering counselling and accompanying girls to clinics. At the organisational level, user fees and condescending health providers’ attitudes hindered ANC use. Yet, good patient-provider communication, privacy and confidentiality played a key role in enabling ANC attendance.Conclusion Pregnant adolescent girls face unique challenges that prevent them from accessing ANC early and completing the recommended number of visits. These challenges range from intrapersonal factors to interpersonal and organisational factors. Programmes to improve early initiation of ANC for pregnant adolescents should include interventions that address the social stigma associated with early and unintended pregnancy, promote family support and make health facilities responsive to the needs of pregnant girls.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/6/e093696.full
spellingShingle Anthony Idowu Ajayi
Caroline W Kabiru
Anne Achieng
“Trying not to be seen”: a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls’ experiences seeking antenatal care in a Nairobi informal settlement
BMJ Open
title “Trying not to be seen”: a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls’ experiences seeking antenatal care in a Nairobi informal settlement
title_full “Trying not to be seen”: a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls’ experiences seeking antenatal care in a Nairobi informal settlement
title_fullStr “Trying not to be seen”: a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls’ experiences seeking antenatal care in a Nairobi informal settlement
title_full_unstemmed “Trying not to be seen”: a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls’ experiences seeking antenatal care in a Nairobi informal settlement
title_short “Trying not to be seen”: a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls’ experiences seeking antenatal care in a Nairobi informal settlement
title_sort trying not to be seen a qualitative study exploring adolescent girls experiences seeking antenatal care in a nairobi informal settlement
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/6/e093696.full
work_keys_str_mv AT anthonyidowuajayi tryingnottobeseenaqualitativestudyexploringadolescentgirlsexperiencesseekingantenatalcareinanairobiinformalsettlement
AT carolinewkabiru tryingnottobeseenaqualitativestudyexploringadolescentgirlsexperiencesseekingantenatalcareinanairobiinformalsettlement
AT anneachieng tryingnottobeseenaqualitativestudyexploringadolescentgirlsexperiencesseekingantenatalcareinanairobiinformalsettlement