Robot babies tackling teenage pregnancies

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A robot baby. Photo source: wikimedia.org

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By JOAQUÍN SARMIENTO

“Anthony” cried so hard at night that Susana Ortegon couldn’t sleep. The weekend felt like an eternity for the 13-year-old.

So, when she handed back her “robot baby” it was with great relief. She had taken part in a programme launched by the Caldas municipality in Colombia to try to tackle the problem of teenage pregnancies.

“This experience was pretty tough, it’s not easy being a mommy or a daddy,” Ortegon said.

The baby’s cries were so loud that they even bothered her parents.

“It’s awful! Awful! On top of that, the baby never stops crying and you’ve got to look after it all the time,” she added.

The baby – a rubber doll with built-in software – cries when it wants to be fed, have its diaper changed or simply needs a cuddle.

It’s a voluntary programme launched in schools by the Caldas municipality, just outside Medellin, in a bid to reduce the high level of teenage pregnancies in the town.

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A robot baby. Photo source: wikimedia.org

The initiative has been used in at least 89 other countries and is being included in the local authority’s social project.

“With this strategy we managed to reduce the number of teenage pregnancies by a huge amount,” said Juan Carlos Sanchez, the local authority’s health secretary.

When the programme began in 2017, the municipality registered 168 pregnancies of girls aged 13-19, which was down to 141 last year.

More than 1,200 teenagers have taken classes in Caldas, where almost 15 per cent of the population is aged 10-19.

In Colombia as a whole, a fifth of babies born in 2018 were to mothers aged 10-19.

The robot babies are programmed to behave according to a specific age. Ortegon’s was designed to mimic the behavior of a two-month-old.

“It’s like having a real baby,” said Ortegon. “Last night I got so desperate I started crying.”

At first, she called her baby “Tony Stark” after the lead character in “Iron Man” but she later realised the exercise was serious and changed his name.

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It’s not just teenage girls taking part in the project.

Miguel Angel Suarez spent his entire weekend at home looking after “Sofia” while his friends played football.

“Pregnancies are not just the responsibility of women,” said the 17-year-old, just seconds before Sofia started to cry.

“This teaches us a lesson.”

Authorities say the programme has been well received by parents, even though some were opposed to sex education.

The exercise appears to be working.

“No way am I thinking about having one at this age,” said Suarez, who wants to wait until he has a job so his children can have “a dignified life”.

Ortegon, though, worries the programme could have the opposite effect.

“It’s an authentic experience, but there are some people who could take it in the opposite way,” she said, noting that some may feel a real baby “would provide them with company”.

She may be right. A study published in the medical journal The Lancet in August 2016 found that teenagers who took part in the initiative showed a greater propensity to get pregnant than those that didn’t.

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Researchers followed a group of 3,000 teens aged 13-15 until they were 20.

The study found that those included in the Virtual Infant Parenting programme showed “higher rates of pregnancies and abortions”. – AFP

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