Reports: Teen girls made pact to get pregnant
From Associated Press
June 19, 2008 11:10 PM EDT
GLOUCESTER, Mass. - A pact made by a
group of teens to get pregnant and raise their babies together is at
least partly behind a sudden spike in pregnancies at Gloucester High
School, school officials said.
Principal Joseph Sullivan told Time
magazine in a story published Wednesday that the girls confessed to
making the pact after the school began investigating a rise in
pregnancies that has left 17 girls at the school carrying a child.
Normally, there are about four pregnancies a year at the school.
Sullivan told Time that students were
coming to the school clinic multiple times to get pregnancy tests, and
"seemed more upset when they weren't pregnant than when they were."
Some of the girls reacted to the news
they were pregnant with high fives and plans for baby showers, Sullivan
said. One of the fathers "is a 24-year-old homeless guy," Sullivan told
the magazine.
Superintendent Christopher Farmer confirmed the deal to WBZ-TV, saying the girls had "an agreement to get pregnant."
He said the girls are generally "girls who lack self-esteem and have a lack of love in their life."
The first reports of the students'
apparent plan to get pregnant were in the Gloucester Daily Times in
March, when Sullivan said students were reporting that the girls were
getting pregnant on purpose.
The rash of pregnancies has shaken the
seaside city about 30 miles north of Boston. Last month, two officials
at the high school health center resigned to protest the resistance
from the local hospital to the confidential distribution of
contraceptives. The hospital administers the state money that funds the
clinic.
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