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You're here > Plan International Home  >  What we do  >  HIV and AIDS  >  Child participation  >  HIV prevention should address the needs of teenage brides

HIV prevention should address the needs of teenage brides

"I got the chance to come here because I was the best girl in my class back home. I don’t want to get married. I am too young, only 14 years old."

© Kamsan Sreng

Aichatou – not her real name - is less likely to become infected with HIV than many girls her age in Niger. She goes to a boarding school that Plan has opened for young girls. It has not only given her a chance to study - it has helped her avoid marriage before adulthood. The common practice of early marriage is linked to many health issues including HIV. 

"I know a girl back home who got married, she is 15 years old. You can have problems when you give birth. And you cannot go to school," says Aichatou, who explains how she and her peers make use of theatre to raise awareness of the issues.

Why are married girls more at risk?

The majority of sexually active girls aged 15–19 in developing countries are married*. They tend to have higher rates of HIV infection than their sexually active, unmarried peers:

  • they are more likely to have unprotected sex (one reason being the expectation to have children)
  • typical husbands are more likely to carry the virus than typical boyfriends of teenage girls
    (husbands are often older and more sexually experienced - results of the DHS survey* show that 30 percent of male partners of married adolescent girls were infected with HIV, while only 11.5 percent of the partners of unmarried girls were HIV-positive).

Increasingly, HIV is spreading more rapidly among those powerless negotiate the terms of sexuality and, as a result, is becoming increasingly selective of young people, especially young women. HIV prevention strategies need to reflect this in order, and offer information and feasible choices to young women under pressure to become pregnant.

As part of a Pan African conference on HIV, Plan sponsored a discussion where young people shared their views on adolescent sexual health: looking at the root causes of young people’s vulnerability to HIV, and how adolescent–centered projects can play a lead role in combating HIV. 


*based on analysis of Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data from 26 countries. It excludes China, where marriage is typically later. For details see paper from which this brief is excerpted: Bruce, Judith and Shelley Clarke. 2004. “Including married adolescents in adolescent reproductive health and HIV/AIDS policy,” background paper. New York: Population Council


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