The average age of the pregnant married juveniles was 17.86 ± 1.00. Previous studies reported that the average age of such juveniles was between 16 and 18 (
16-
18). It can be asserted that the average age of the sampling group included in the study is in accordance with the literature.
It was established that majority of the pregnant children/adolescents who participated in our study were secondary school graduates. In the study conducted by Durmaz (2013) in Diyarbakır on a close date with a similar sampling, it was reported that 40.9% of the pregnant married juveniles were secondary school graduates. In the studies in the literature, it was determined that many married, pregnant adolescents had completed primary school (
19,
20). However, in the study conducted by Chang et al. it was established that 60.9% of the pregnant adolescents were high school graduates (
21). With regard to our study, it can be stated that the reason that the pregnant adolescents were secondary school graduates is that eight years of education is compulsory in our country. We are of the opinion that the fact that the pregnant juvenile brides in these studies have different levels of education probably results from regional differences, the differing statuses of women, differing socio-cultural structures and for economic reasons.
According to our study, none of the women were working in an income-generating job. In Durmaz’s (2013) doctoral dissertation study with 66 pregnant married juveniles, it was reported that none of them worked (
16). In the limited number of research studies conducted in Turkey, it was stated that 62% - 96% of pregnant adolescents are not engaged in paid work (
18-
20). In the study conducted by Thaithae et al. (2011) in Thailand, it was determined that 7.6% of the pregnant juveniles between the ages of 11 and 15 worked as laborers/agricultural workers, and that 29.4% of the pregnant adolescents between the ages of 16 and 19 worked as laborers/agricultural workers (
20). It is thought that the reason pregnant juveniles are mostly unemployed might result from their young age, high unemployment in the region and a common belief in traditional structures in which women are not able to work outside the home.
Almost all of pregnant juvenile brides who participated in our study stated that their income did not meet their expenses. In another study analyzing the income status of pregnant married children/adolescents, more than half of them stated that their income-expense status was equal (
16). In study by Gokce et al. (2007), it was stated that the monthly income of 53.5% of married pregnant juveniles was between 100 and 199.9 dollars (
18). When the literature is reviewed, it is observed that one of the reasons for child pregnancy is poverty. With regard to our study, this high level of poverty might be associated with an increasing rate of unemployment in Turkey and the large number of terror incidents in the region during the period of study.
In our study, it was established that more than half of the married pregnant juveniles lived with their extended family. This situation is similar to the results of other studies (Durmaz, 2013) (
16). It can perhaps be assumed the reason for the high rate of living with their extended family is that the groom and groom’s family can dominate girls more easily and that girls will perform their ascribed responsibilities with less resistance (
22).
In our study and other studies in literature, it has been found that married pregnant girls/adolescents have generally entered into a civil marriage (
16,
18,
19). In a study conducted in America, it was reported that 99.7% of pregnant black adolescents are not married (
21). The legal age of marriage in Turkey, the country in which this study was conducted, is 18. However, the legal age limit of marriage can be reduced to 16 with the family’s approval and a court decision (
4). The different situation found in different countries probably results from the cultural, political and legal differences between them.
Juvenile marriages generally occur between relatives. The reason for this is that parents do not want to give their daughters to strangers, that the social circle is limited (
4) and that there is the idea that relatives will take better care of their daughters and more likely to excuse their mistakes in carrying out their duties. In our study, it was determined that there is a substantial degree of kinship between pregnant juvenile brides and their spouses. While the study by Durmaz (2013) supports our findings, the study conducted by Yildizhan et al. (2009) presents a lower rate of kinship between adolescent pregnant women and their spouses. This difference is thought to result from the year the studies were carried out, the regions they were carried out in and the samples used in the studies. Juvenile marriages are higher in almost every region in Turkey, especially in Southeastern Anatolia and East Anatolia (
4). In the western parts of Turkey, the rate of adolescent pregnancy is at 3%, but it is at a level of 6% and more in the southeast (
10). In conclusion, it can be asserted that the characteristics of the juvenile brides who participated in our study were, with regard to average age, educational status, employment and income status; family type lived in, civil marriage status and kinship to spouse, similar to the results of other studies.
In our study, the pregnant married juveniles stated that they were subjected to violence and that they experienced verbal, physical, emotional, sexual and economic types of violence. The world health organization (2005) reported that the proportion of pregnant women subjected to violence is between 4 and 12% (
23), that one out of four women is subjected to physical or sexual violence by her husband during pregnancy (
24), that a pregnant woman’s being exposed to violence varies in different countries and is most common in Egypt (32%), India (28%), Saudi Arabia (21%) and Mexico (11%) (
25), that 3% - 11% of women in America are subjected to violence during their pregnancy, and that this rate goes up to 38% in adolescent mothers (
26). In another clinical study conducted in Africa (2011), it was reported that women were exposed predominantly to emotional (25% - 49%), physical (23% - 40%) and sexual (3% - 27%) violence during their pregnancies (
27). In the study conducted by Giray et al. (2005), it was determined that 20% of pregnant women were exposed to domestic violence during pregnancy (
11). No study could be found in the literature concerning domestic violence towards pregnant married juveniles. Domestic violence studies are generally conducted with adult women. In foreign studies, it is often stated that pregnant adolescents conceive through extramarital intercourse. This study was carried out with girls who had married in a civil and/or religious marriage ceremony and whose marriage had been approved by their families and immediate social circles. Furthermore, domestic violence in juvenile marriages is mostly studied retrospectively. Since our study was performed with married girls/adolescents who were pregnant at the time, no study could be found in the literature with which to make a head-to-head comparison. However, it can be asserted as a result of our study that the rates of domestic violence and the types of violence to which pregnant married juveniles are subjected have similarities with the rates of domestic violence and types of violence which women in the adult population and other adolescent girls experience.
In this study, it was determined that the educational status, income status, family type, civil marriage status and having a planned pregnancy do not influence the exposure to violence but whether the marital relationship is perceived by pregnant girls/adolescents as good or bad does affect whether violence is experienced. In our study, the age, educational status, profession, economic status, family type, and kinship with the spouse of pregnant child bride did not affect the presence of domestic violence. In the study conducted by Giray et al. (2005), the age of the pregnant woman and her spouse, having a job, economic status, family type, kinship between spouses, type of marriage, the number of children and years of marriage did not affect the presence of domestic violence. On the other hand, women who experience physical violence at other times during their marriage are more likely to be exposed to violence during their pregnancy than those who do not (
11). From this study and the study conducted by Giray et al. it is possible to assert that whether the relationship is perceived by spouses as good or bad increases or reduces domestic violence. In Guler’s study (2010), there was a statistically significant difference found between whether a pregnant woman was subjected to physical, emotional, sexual and economic violence with regard to her spouse’s educational status, employment status, economic status and whether the pregnancy was planned (
28). In a study by Giray et al. the fact that a pregnancy had been planned and that marriage had been entered into voluntarily did not affect exposure to violence (
11). In Guler’s study (2010), there was a difference found between whether or not the pregnancy had been planned and whether or not the pregnant woman was subjected to violence (
28). In our study, having married voluntarily reduced the degree of exposure to violence. It is possible to state that this finding is partially consonant with the literature.
Nurses providing healthcare services belong to the occupational group that works with individuals in society in the most face-to-face way. Within the framework of their traditional and contemporary roles, nurses occupy a position that allows them to educate individuals and society about juvenile marriages and adolescent pregnancies and the sexually-transmitted infections and reproductive health risks that might arise during pregnancy, birth, the post-natal period and throughout life. Therefore, any training which raises awareness of these could well be instructive in preventing juvenile marriages and pregnancies and in managing current pregnancies. To this end, nurses should provide more comprehensive healthcare to women, and guide and encourage them through home visits to use the services available. Measures taken at an early stage might well help a woman to live a healthier life in future periods (
29).
4.1. Limitations of the Research
There are some limitations to this study. Firstly, while it is possible to receive written or verbal consent of women who are 18 or over, for females under 18 parental approval should have been granted. The intention was to receive the approval of the parents/legal guardians of the girls/adolescents involved but these approvals were only received verbally since the families said that it was necessary to receive the permission of their daughters’ spouses because they were married and some of the participants stated that they did not want to engage with their spouses.
Secondly, people migrated from two provinces (Sur and Baglar) due to terrorist attacks during the period in which the study was being conducted and it had been planned to include these provinces in the research sample. Therefore, it was not possible to attain the size of sample that had been planned.
Thirdly, the fact that this was a study about violence caused some of the juveniles or their accompanying family member to refuse to participate in the study. This prevented the size of the sampling which had been planned from being attained.
Fourthly, although the researcher wanted to perform interviews personally, family members who were accompanying some of the juveniles were absolutely opposed to this. It is thought that this situation might have affected the study’s results.
The fifth restriction is that since the participants had married at an early age through a religious ceremony instead of civil marriage, this situation caused them to appear ‘unmarried’ in official records. Since this prevented us from determining the exact number to be used in the sample, only an approximate sampling was taken.
The strongest aspect of this study is that it is the only study have been conducted in an attempt to determine the degree of domestic violence towards child or adolescent brides who were currently pregnant, because, as far as we could find in the literature, all of the previous studies were retrospective studies.
4.2. Conclusion
Domestic violence towards pregnant married juveniles remains at a considerable level. Furthermore, it was determined that there was no significant relation between domestic violence towards pregnant married girls/adolescents and their essential personal characteristics but that such violence is related to whether the marriage was planned and whether the status of the relationship is perceived to be good or bad. Moreover, it was seen that these results are similar to results regarding domestic violence towards adult women.
If a woman is determined to be subject to domestic violence as a result of her application to the health institution, duties of health personnel include documenting the woman’s abuse history, performing diagnostic, therapeutic, and follow-up activities, performing risk assessment, developing a security plan, informing the victim, referring the victim to protection and assistance services, recording the case, and notifying authorities. In this process, health personnel ensure that the victim fills the domestic violence form, notify the hospital police, perform reporting and risk assessment activities, and refer the victim to other health institutions if necessary. It is necessary to prevent underage marriages and raise awareness in the society regarding domestic violence in underage marriages. It is recommended that socio-centric projects are conducted, mostly on prevention of underage marriages, to protect the rights of adolescents (both girls and boys), establish equality in terms of social status, meet their health-related and educational needs and, most importantly, protect them against violence.