Sri Lankan police have issued an urgent advisory amid rising concerns over teenage pregnancies, urging parents to strengthen family bonds and monitor children’s online activities to safeguard vulnerable youth.
Sri Lanka Police have issued a stark public warning following a reported uptick in teenage and underage pregnancies, emphasizing the critical role of parental involvement and family support in protecting young people from exploitation and risky behaviours.
In a strongly worded advisory, authorities highlighted how emotional distance within families can leave children, particularly girls, susceptible to seeking connections online, often leading to dangerous situations. Platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp were flagged as potential gateways for inappropriate contacts if not supervised properly.
“Strong family support and parental involvement are crucial,” police stressed, warning that a lack of attention at home can drive teenagers toward behaviors that expose them to harm. Parents are urged to foster open environments for discussion, monitor for signs such as sudden behavioural changes, declining academic performance, excessive smartphone use, or social withdrawal.
Police say that Sri Lanka’s National Child Protection Data Highlights Vulnerabilities as Social Media and Parental Neglect Fuel Risks.
The National Child Protection Authority (NCPA) received 10,455 child-related complaints in 2025, including 545 cases of sexual harassment, 231 serious sexual abuse incidents, 38 rapes, 150 cyber abuse complaints, and 79 teenage pregnancies. Authorities are encouraging immediate reporting of concerns via hotlines 119, 118, 109, or 107.
Broader Context: A Declining but Persistent Challenge
While Sri Lanka has made notable progress in reducing teenage pregnancies over the past decade and a half, the issue remains a significant public health and social concern, particularly in certain regions and amid emerging trends. National data from the Family Health Bureau shows teenage pregnancies (among girls aged 10-19) declining from 6.5 per cent of all registered pregnancies in 2009 to 3.8 per cent in 2023.
The adolescent fertility rate has fluctuated between 14 and 21 births per 1,000 adolescents aged 15-19 in recent years, standing at around 15.09 in 2023. However, recent reports indicate rises in specific categories. In 2024, child pregnancies (often referring to younger adolescents) increased from 167 in 2023 to 213, according to police data shared in media briefings.
Regional disparities are stark. Districts like Batticaloa and Trincomalee have historically recorded higher rates – around 8-9 per cent in some years – compared to the national average, influenced by socioeconomic factors more prevalent in certain provinces.
Studies, including one in rural areas, have found adolescent pregnancies comprising 7.5 per cent of cases in sampled pregnant women, rising to 22.4 per cent among first-time mothers. These pregnancies are linked to lower education levels, low BMI, anaemia, higher anxiety, and reduced pre-conception care.
Causes and Contributing Factors
Experts point to multiple interconnected drivers. Key contributors include:
- Low education and school dropout: Early exit from schooling increases vulnerability.
- Limited Comprehensive Sexuality Education (CSE) and contraception access: Gaps in knowledge and services persist despite national efforts.
- Socioeconomic pressures: Poverty, limited opportunities, and family instability, including parental migration.
- Early relationships and cultural factors: Early romantic involvements, sometimes leading to cohabitation, and varying practices across ethnic or community lines.
- Digital risks: Unsupervised social media use, as highlighted by police.
Research identifies additional risk factors such as lower family strictness, poor teacher support, and belonging to certain ethnic groups with higher odds in community studies (e.g., Tamil or Muslim communities in some analyses), though these must be addressed sensitively alongside universal prevention.
Many teenage pregnancies are unplanned, with affected girls often lacking awareness of reproductive health basics. A National Youth and Health Survey noted that 45 per cent of girls were unaware pregnancy could occur after a single sexual encounter.
Health and Social Consequences
Teenage pregnancies carry elevated risks for both mother and child, including maternal anaemia, hypertensive disorders, low birth weight, preterm delivery, and higher infant mortality. Adolescent mothers often face interrupted education, reduced employment prospects, and long-term socioeconomic disadvantages. Their children may experience poorer developmental outcomes and perpetuate cycles of vulnerability.
In Sri Lanka’s context, where maternal mortality is relatively low, these cases still strain healthcare resources and child protection systems. Unmarried adolescent mothers or those in unstable relationships face additional stigma and support gaps.
Ongoing Efforts and Recommendations
Government bodies, including the Ministry of Health, NCPA, and police, are ramping up awareness. Programmes target schools, parents, and communities on reproductive health, life skills, and digital safety. The Family Health Bureau continues tracking and providing antenatal services, though challenges remain in reaching at-risk groups early.
UNFPA and UNICEF have supported initiatives on trends, determinants, and youth-friendly services, stressing the need for better Comprehensive Sexuality Education and addressing subnational disparities.
Police and child protection advocates call for a multi-pronged approach: stronger parental engagement, school-based education, community vigilance, and swift law enforcement action against exploitation. Experts recommend enhancing access to confidential counselling, contraception for older adolescents within legal bounds, and support for pregnant teens to continue education where possible.
As Sri Lanka navigates post-economic challenges and evolving social norms, addressing teenage pregnancy requires balancing cultural sensitivities with evidence-based interventions. The recent police advisory serves as a timely reminder that prevention starts at home, reinforced by societal and institutional support.

