Parents! Parents! Parents! It is about time to Talk to our Children about SEX!

 

Am not usually a fan of eves dropping on people’s conversations, but on this one, I didn’t have a choice but to pay maximum attention.

I usually leave work at around 5:00 pm and get home between 5:30 -6:00 pm, as a norm. I have taught myself that it is a good thing to interact with people in my neighborhood after a long days work and get to know what transpired during the day while I was away. Well, am sure majority of people would have a dissenting opinion on this and especially the so called “Middle Class”, but there is nothing much that can be done pertaining perceptive reasoning. 

So back to my story; as I got home, there is this place that they sell the traditional Meru porridge called “Mukio”. Any Meru would agree with me this is a great delicacy that would leave anyone licking their lips after a mug or two of the same and especially during this weird cold season in the month of September. The owner of the place set up a sitting arrangement that can accommodate around 7 people at a time where people can exchange pleasantries as they catch up after a long day. On this particular day, I found the lady who sells the delicacy with two other women who seemed to have cleared their mugs of Mukio porridge in a deep conversation. As I was enjoying my porridge, the lady seated on the left and right in-front of me, the three of them were having a conversation and informing the others, that her elder sister was arrested by cops from Kasarani police station a couple of weeks ago. So the two of them were curious to know what had transpired leading to the arrest of the sister.  Apparently the sister was a pharmacist working in a chemist around my neighborhood and that there is this 16 year old girl (a form two student) who visited the chemist and inquired to procure a particular drug (unfortunately they didn’t mention the name of the drug) and it caught the sister by surprise on why such a girl would want to access such medicines. The girl managed to convince the pharmacist, that the medicines were for her 27 year old sister at home and that she wasn’t feeling well. Interestingly, the pharmacist agreed to sell the drugs to her knowing very well, they were for procuring an abortion and that the girl was an underage as per the laws of Kenya. 

As they kept having their conversation, I tried as much as possible to appear passive so as not to appear as if I am keenly following through it, so I quickly opened my phone to keep myself busy as I get to listen much more keenly to what they were talking about. At this point in time, the lady attending to the “Mukio Porridge” shop pulled a chair closer in ensuring that she doesn't miss an inch of the conversation.  So the under-age girl who bought the abortion drug from the chemist was confronted by the mother as what type of drug she was taking and how she got the money to  buy it, having in mind she is just student. So after the confrontation with the mother, she revealed where she had bought the drug and the mother reported the issue to the police, and consequently leading to the arrest of the pharmacist. the pharmacist was held at the police station for approximately two days, from what I gathered, but  the parent of the girl didn’t appear interested to press charges and so she opted to settle it out of the judicial system because according to her, she didn’t have money to prosecute the case further and the pharmacist was let go. As the conversation went on, it became quite clear that the form two girl had committed two previous backstreet abortions at the age of 16 or less and this really took me by surprise.  This begs the  following questions;

  •       Who was the person responsible in impregnating this child? Was he an underage as well or an adult who deliberately did this? 
  •     Are the present parents able and well equipped to talk to their children about sex?
  •     Are the current crop of children over-exposed on matters sex?
  •     Was it a case of peer pressure?
  •     Was it a case of an adult taking advantage of a younger girl? 
  •     Was it a case of using money as bait for sex with a school going child?
  •     Is the present parents too busy “hassling” and leaving the children to be “taught by the world”?
  •     Has the community completely turned back to shared responsibilities of bringing up children as it was in the 80s and early 90s?
  •      Did this particular girl lack the safe space to talk about her reproductive health?

When we were growing up in the 80s and early 90s, our parents were a bit closer to us vis a vis nowadays where there is an increasingly distance occasioned by changing types of occupations and life demands. Then, there used to be a community approach in raising children and every parent would concur with such a societal set up.

Back to the story, was the pharmacist just ignorant to have sold the “abortion drugs” to an underage child? Was she driven by desire for money? Personally I don’t know what her drive was. I am not privy to much information on the mandate of the Drugs and poisons board- the body mandated in overseeing operations of chemists, but am sure such drugs are not to be dispensed over the counter. So as I was about to wind up my mug of Mukio porridge, the other lady and the shop attendant made this comment, “sasa ule mwanamme atakuja kuoa huyo msichana atadhani ameoa msichana mzuri sana, kumbe atapata ni mama mzee (the man who will ever marry that girl later on in life will imagine that the girl is quite fresh only to realize she is an old woman)”.

I have practiced Behavior Science for more than 7 years and in my practice, I remember we had great resource of interventions that are known as “Evidence Based Interventions”. We then had great deliberations with decision makers within the education sector on matters “Comprehensive Sexuality Education” which encompassed integrating Comprehensive Sexuality Education to the Kenyan primary and secondary school curriculum.

In 2011, there was a launch of “National Curriculum on Sexuality and Sexual Health Training for Health Service Providers”[1] whose purpose was “To equip health care providers with the knowledge, skills, and attitudes necessary to ensure high-quality, holistic service provision in the areas of sexuality and sexual health to the adolescents.” How effective has this been to service providers? Had that pharmacist been through this or read this, would she have sold the abortion drug to the underage girl?

On 21st -26th, April, 2013 I participated in the revision of the Comprehensive Sexuality Education Syllabus which was facilitated by UNESCO and Ministry of Education in Nyeri, and we had all the key stakeholders represented in the meeting and from that one week meeting I confident enough that we had a breakthrough. What happened thereafter, it is a story for another day.

Back to the Evidence Based Interventions. I want to specifically talk about;

The Families Matter Program (FMP)[2]: The Families Matter! Program (FMP) is an evidence-based, parent-focused intervention designed to promote positive parenting and effective parent-child communication about sexuality and sexual risk reduction, including risk for child sexual abuse and gender-based violence, for parents or caregivers of 9-12 year-olds in Africa. FMP recognizes that many parents and guardians may need support to effectively convey values and expectations about sexual behavior and communicate important HIV, STD, and pregnancy prevention messages to their children. The goal of FMP is to reduce sexual risk behavior among adolescents by engaging parents in the delivery of primary prevention messages to their children, and increasing awareness and protective strategies against child sexual abuse and harmful gender norms that may lead to violence; and there is,

Healthy Choices for a Better Future (HCBF) - The HC Program is a community-based, group-level intervention developed for youth aged 10-14 years. The intervention curriculum focuses on: · Raising youths’ awareness about the sexual risks they face today; · Improving sexual safety by identifying risky settings; and · Enhancing communication negotiation, and refusal skills.

As we deliberate, about the need to talk to our children on matters sex, it is my considered opinion that, it is better to have the conversations now than wait when it is too late to turn back the tide.

As I pen off, I would like to continuously urge the Civil Societies, the Government Institutions and other key stakeholders/ partners not to tire but to consider institutionalizing these Interventions in our schooling system, they have been proven to work.

Parents, let us NORMALIZE TALKING TO OUR CHILDREN ON MATTERS SEX.

Authored by;

Brian N. Kavuwa.

briventures@gmail.com. 

Comments

  1. Yes parents must have the courage to take the initiative of moulding their children towards sex education and discipline

    ReplyDelete
  2. Very informative, the rain started beating us when we ignored and dumped community based parenting.

    ReplyDelete

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