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 by Emily Bridges, Director of Public Information Services
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new research on teen sexual behavior this week. Researchers examined data from the National Survey on Family Growth, a large survey on how families are created and grow in America, and found that:
- According to their estimates, almost nine million teens in America have ever had sex – 42 percent of males and 43 percent of females.
- Six million are currently sexually active – 31 percent of females and 28 percent of males.
- Many teens used contraception the first time they had sex: 78 percent of males and 85 percent of females. Many also reported using contraception the most recent time they had sex: 93 percent of males and 86 percent of females used a method at last intercourse.
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by Martha Kempner
Originally published on RH Reality Check
The phrase “teachable moments” is an overused education and parenting term that’s supposed to refer to those openings that happen every day for parents to impart information and values to their kids. As a sex educator and writer who sometimes concentrates on talking to your kids about sex, I must have written this phrase a couple hundred times in the last few years but to tell the truth I don’t really like it.
Somehow it doesn’t sound authentic—like it was made up by a committee of publicists or marketers. But more importantly, it sounds formal like something that parents have to look for, recognize, and act on immediately. I prefer the idea that as parents we just have conversations with our kids and maybe in the process they learn something from us.
In the last few months, I have spent a lot of time alone with my older daughter – who at five seems newly ready to take on more complicated concepts. While my little one is still in our great daycare center which is almost never closed, the older one skipped the last session of camp and now operates on a public school schedule which includes things like half-days for teacher conferences and two days off for the Jewish holidays. So we have had a lot of mommy-Charlie days and during them a lot of really interesting conversations.
Not surprisingly, many of them had at least a little bit to do with sexuality. Here’s a sample:
Message: You have to really know someone before you decide you love them and want to marry them.
How it started: The 112th reading of a Disney Sleeping Beauty book.
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by Janine Kossen, Director, Public Policy
Well, they’re at it again. Republicans on the House Foreign Affairs Committee are using smoke and mirrors to try to distract us all from their real intentions of being the most anti-woman, anti-life crusaders the U.S. Congress has seen in decades. But, we’re not falling for their thinly-veiled hypocrisy. And neither should the US public.
Republicans voted eleven separate times yesterday to block funding for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). That’s right, eleven separate times in the span of just three hours. What exactly were they voting against? For starters, they voted against continued funding for prevention and treatment of obstetric fistula, a debilitating condition that results from obstructed and prolonged labor and leaves women shunned by their families and their communities. Who could possibly vote to continue the needless suffering of such women? How about Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) who has made it his mantra to prevent and treat this exact condition? Yes, that’s right, the very man who never shies away from taking credit for the creation of USAID’s obstetric fistula program voted against support for this same service. But, he wasn’t the only one—all Republicans on the committee voted against funding for the prevention and treatment of obstetric fistula.
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October is Let's Talk Month, a time to remember the importance of parent-child communication: it's vital in helping teens develop their values around sexuality and skills to protect themselves. Let's Talk Month is also an opportunity for community agencies, religious institutions, businesses, schools, media, parent groups and health providers to plan programs and activities which encourage parent/child communication about sexuality.
What can you do to encourage parent-child communication this month? Start here for communication tips for parents and ways organizations can get involved. Then visit the Parents Sex Ed Center for much more information about starting and continuing the conversation. Make it a great October! |
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