Audio By Carbonatix
In 2017, the rate of child marriages in Ghana was 21% while regional statistics showed that the Upper East Region recorded a 36.1% rate of child marriages.
Also, the national rate of teenage pregnancy was 14% while the Upper East Region recorded a rate of 17% under the regional rates.
As scary as the figures look, many of the girls who are victims of these phenomena, have no easy access to Sexual Reproductive Health in their communities.
For this reason, Youth Harvest Foundation (YHF) Ghana, an NGO based in the Upper East Region has launched the “Youth4Change” Project with the aim to increase access to Sexual Reproductive Health information and services for out-of-school girls in five communities in the Nabdam district of the Upper East Region, where the rate of teenage pregnancy has been on the rise since the year 2014.

The “Youth4Change” Project aims to reach out to about 3, 000 young people with Sexual Reproductive Health information and youth-friendly services, to contribute to the reduction of teenage pregnancy and child marriages in the Nabdam the district.
The initiative will directly contribute to the attainment of the SDG goal 3.7 of “ensuring universal access to Sexual Reproductive Health care services including Family Planning, information and education and the integration of reproductive health in national strategies and programs”.
According to the Programs Manager for Youth Harvest Foundation, Urban Akagwire, the “Youth4Change” Project is a one-year pilot project in the five selected communities - Kongo, Nangodi, Dasabligo, Pelungu and Sakote.
He said the areas were chosen for the project because “poverty was a main contributory factor to problems of teenage pregnancies and child marriages in Northern Ghana”.
Mr. Akagwire also revealed, the “Youth4Change” Project will empower ten out-of-school youth leaders with adequate information and skills to directly engage with their peers and carry out advocacy activities.

Speaking on behalf of the chiefs and elders of the areas benefitting from the “Youth4Change” Project, the chief of Yakote, (an area under Nangodi), Naab Ntalebmogri Wongnab II said teenage pregnancies and child marriages were a burden in the area, as they were the cause of many girls dropping out of school.
He said the success of the project would bring a huge relief to the people of the area.
Latest Stories
-
Former Accra Mayor Blankson endorses Wontumi for NPP national chairmanship
15 minutes -
Eid festivals explained on Behind The Lens with Queen Liz
23 minutes -
Meet Emelia Naa Ayeley Aryee, the Ghanaian Gender Advocate helping couples overcome infertility stigma
50 minutes -
Oil pulls back as traders look for progress on US-Iran talks
2 hours -
The proposed imposition of a 0.75% fee on Mobile Money-To-Bank transfers raises serious concerns regarding fairness, financial inclusion, and the underlying principle of interoperability within the digital financial ecosystem
2 hours -
Trump raises refugee ceiling by 10,000 to bring in more white South Africans
2 hours -
One killed and others missing after chemical explosion at US paper mill
2 hours -
First Ghanaians set to be repatriated from South Africa over anti-immigrant protests
2 hours -
Deliver or be questioned – Majority Chief Whip warns OSP
2 hours -
Crime is everywhere – Dafeamekpor slams OSP’s Accra-centred operations
3 hours -
Don’t be cocooned in Accra – Dafeamekpor pushes OSP to invade districts
3 hours -
Free sanitary pads and pad bank Initiative cut teenage pregnancy in Bosomtwe – Girl Child coordinator
3 hours -
Asunafo North Municipal Assembly deploys DL-Rev Software to tackle revenue shortfall
3 hours -
General Mosquito promised to ‘annihilate’ NPP – Dafeamekpor reveals details of earlier tour
4 hours -
Asiedu Nketia has been touring since 2021, not plotting new campaign, says Dafeamekpor
4 hours