As the Ministry of Health cops much deserved flak for dragging its heels on funding a melanoma drug, some credit must be given for a decision made six years ago to fund and subsidise a contraceptive for teenagers. Teen pregnancies have dropped and it's partly due to the increased availability of the long-acting contraceptive Jadelle.
Jadelle sees one or two small rods put into a woman's arm and progesterone is released into the bloodstream for three to five years, preventing the ovaries releasing an egg each month. Since the Government began subsidising it in 2010, teen pregnancy rates have dropped 37 per cent throughout the country.
Let's face it, teenagers can be forgetful, and having to take a contraceptive pill religiously every day is out of the question for some.
We are so much better as a society by preventing teenagers from having children they don't want, can't care for and can't afford.
The new figures show another trend - mums older than 40.