News

Spreading the word: Youth educators provide sexual and reproductive health outreach in Honduras

Over 1,500 adolescent peer educators have been trained as part of the COPEITSA programme. ©UNFPA Honduras
  • 19 April 2016

LA CEIBA, Honduras – A quiet student approaches a nondescript wooden box and casually slips in a folded piece of paper. On it is scrawled a burning question.

“Can contraceptive pills cause infertility?”

As the day goes on, the scenario repeats. “Are condoms safe?” “Is it normal for my uncle or step-father to touch me?” “How do contraceptive implants work?” 

These are just a few examples of the many questions that adolescents, who often have few other sources for this critical information, have placed into these boxes, which can currently be found at schools and youth health centres throughout Honduras.

Soon, a thorough answer to the anonymous question will be written by an adolescent peer educator – with guidance from an adult expert, and posted in a public glass case for all to see and learn from. Each of these educators has received training on sexual and reproductive health through the Committees for the Prevention of Pregnancies and STIs among Adolescents (COPEITSA) programme, which is supported by UNFPA.

Jennifer, age 14, is a COPEITSA peer educator. She says that when a representative from a local health centre visited her classroom to recruit volunteers for the programme, her hand immediately shot into the air.

At the time, her mother had recently died, two of her sisters had already become adolescent mothers and her grandmother, who had adopted her, had emigrated to the United States in search of work, leaving Jennifer full of questions about how to avoid becoming an adolescent mother, like her sisters, but without many adults to turn to for answers.

Two peer educators hold buttons reading "Sexuality Education is Your Right." © UNFPA Honduras

“The first thing I did was read a book they gave us and pass out flyers,” she says. “Then I learned how to speak about sexually transmitted infections (STIs), adolescent pregnancy and the use of condoms, and now I teach my relatives and friends how to use them.”

In addition, she has been officially invited to share her knowledge with groups of young people at local health centres and at her school.

Young people lack access to critical information

In Honduras, there is little public discussion around contraception, family planning or sexual and reproductive health, including in most schools, and according to UNFPA estimates, 26 per cent of Honduran women give birth before age 18 – the second-highest rate of adolescent pregnancy in Latin America.

In addition, 46 per cent of all Honduran women of reproductive age who would like access to modern contraceptives do not have it, and the country registers approximately 60 per cent of all new HIV infections in Central America.

COPEITSA is seeking to drive down these rates by not only ensuring that young people receive comprehensive sexuality education, and also information on gender equality and empowerment, but also that they receive it from the people they are most likely to listen to: Their peers. 

“In some parts of the country, one in three girls ages 10 to 19 is already a mother,” says Hugo González, UNFPA’s representative in Honduras. “[COPEITSA] is helping young people and women understand their rights, achieve their full potential and live a life with dignity.”

Getting the word out

A peer educator visits a clinic. © UNFPA Honduras

Since its launch in 2013, the programme has trained over 1,500 adolescents as peer educators, and they have in turn reached countless more – presenting information at fairs, movie theatres, concerts and on YouTube, handing out flyers from parade floats and even performing educational puppet shows.

“We are getting an education so we can educate others and prevent girls from raising children, which is the phenomenon we are experiencing,” says peer educator Gabriel Alejandro, age 18.

And the programme doesn't only generates enthusiasm among young people, it has also received broad support among civil society groups and government representatives, including from the country’s President and First Lady.

The Question Box at Gabriel’s school, the Manuel Bonilla Institute in Le Ceiba, often receives 30 to 40 questions a week. And Gabriel works to diligently answer the questions, and also to engage in dialogue with her fellow students. “Young people trust each other,” she says. 

Indira, who has been a COPEITSA peer educator for two years, agrees. “There are many myths out there regarding prevention, and if we talk to each other, we are not afraid of being judged,” she says. “I like to see young people realize they have the capacity to acquire more knowledge and even to help change sexist practices, which are fairly common between men and women here.”

– Mildred Tejada 

We use cookies and other identifiers to help improve your online experience. By using our website you agree to this, see our cookie policy

X