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European Approaches to Adolescent Sexual Behavior and Responsibility:
Executive Summary & Call to Action [PDF]
The entire monograph
is also available in [PDF] format.
Call to Action
Advocates for Youth calls for a new national dialogue on adolescent
sexual health, focusing on respect,
rights, responsibility, and research.
Given both the high rates of teenage pregnancy and sexually
transmitted diseases in the United States and the lessons
learned in the Netherlands, Germany, and France, Advocates
for Youth calls for a new national dialogue on adolescent
sexual health that recognizes sexuality as a normal, healthy
component of human growth and development and that has, as
its core philosophical tenets: 1) respect for all adolescents
as valuable individuals, 2) recognition that teens have the
right to receive accurate, complete sexual health information
and health services, and 3) acceptance that young people,
like adults, have the responsibility to protect themselves
and their partners from unintended childbearing and sexually
transmitted diseases (STDs). Advocates for Youth calls on
all policy makers, educators, parents, clergy, clinicians,
and media professionals to insist that sexual health policies
be driven by research—not by politics or religious dogma.
Sexuality
and the expression of sexual feelings are normal, healthy
components of adolescent growth and development.
Sexual feelings should not provoke shame, and information
about sexuality should not provoke fear. Adolescents have
questions about what is normal, and they need to learn the
skills that will help them develop and sustain loving, rewarding,
committed, intimate relationships over the course of their
lives. Open, honest dialogue about sexuality and sexual development
can help U.S. teens, like their European counterparts, better
prepare to create committed relationships and to protect
themselves and their partners from unintended pregnancy and
STDs.
All adolescents deserve respect as valuable
individuals.
Every single adolescent is a valuable individual who deserves
the respect and support of family, community, and society.
Adults need to view young people as assets rather than as
potential problems. Each adolescent has opinions, feelings,
and experiences that matter. Each has a unique contribution
to make. Young people should be encouraged to get involved—to
make a difference in the world. Families, communities, and
society should act so that young people appreciate and develop
their individual talents and value both themselves and others.
Society demonstrates that it values young people by providing
them with good quality education, economic security, and
the promise of fulfilling futures.
Every young person has the right to the
information and services necessary to make responsible decisions
about his or her reproductive and sexual health.
Adolescents, like adults, have the right to complete, honest,
and accurate reproductive and sexual health information.
Adolescents, like adults, have the right to accessible, affordable,
and quality health care services. Confidentiality is critical
in this sensitive area, for taking away a young person's
privacy also takes away access to care. Parents can be most
supportive by creating open, loving, and respectful relationships
with their children.
Rights entail responsibilities.
Families, communities, and society have a responsibility
to provide young people with the support they need to create
healthy, fulfilling lives. Adolescents, in turn, have the
responsibility to act upon the information and services available
to them. The right to information and health services comes
with the responsibility to protect oneself and one's partner
against unintended pregnancy and STDs, including HIV.
Research must dictate
public policy.
Public policies that impact the health and the well being
of young people should rest securely on scientific research.
Adolescents deserve sexual health strategies based upon best
practices as determined by evaluation and research. Science—not
politics or religion—should drive public health programs
and policies.
Source/Citation:
Berne L and Huberman B. European Approaches to Adolescent Sexual Behavior & Responsibility: Executive Summary & Call to Action. Washington, DC: Advocates for Youth, 1999.
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