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European Approaches to Adolescent Sexual Behavior and Responsibility:
Executive Summary & Call to Action [PDF]
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Family and Community Influences on Adolescent Sexuality
Many adults in the United States believe that sexuality education should
begin in the home. Yet, evidence suggests that families provide too little
sexuality education and often provide it too late. According to one study,
U.S. family communication about sex includes "a few direct, sometimes
forceful, verbal messages; a lot of indirect verbal messages; and a background
mosaic of innumerable nonverbal messages."55 Only
10 percent of families have any kind of on-going discussion about sex,
and a significant majority of young people and parents report dissatisfaction
with the quantity and quality of family discussions about sexual issues.55
When a national sample of parents was asked how often they talked with
their children about sex, 54 percent reported never, 28 percent said
rarely, and five percent said about once a year. Those parents who reported
discussing sex with their children said they did so about twice as frequently
as the teens said they did. Further, while 81 percent of parents felt
they got honest answers from their children about sexual issues, only
22 percent of teens agreed.56
In some families, youth receive the message while quite young that they
should not ask questions about sexuality.57 Teenage
women report more discussions with parents about sex than do teenage
males, but both genders agree that parents talk less about contraception
and STDs than about dating, alcohol, and drugs.58 Most teens who do have
discussions about sexuality with a parent report having them with their
mothers.57,58 Finally,
43 percent of teenage men and 65 percent of teenage women say they have
no talks with their fathers about sexuality.57 Many
teens believe that adults give inadequate information about birth control
because adults: 1) think teens cannot make their own decisions; 2) tell
teens things too late; 3) do not listen and want to do all the talking;
and 4) talk about things irrelevant to the situations teens actually
deal with.58 In one recent poll,
over half of young people surveyed say there are times when they want
to talk with their parents about sexuality issues but feel they will
not be understood or that their parents are too busy to listen.59
Parents acknowledge that they are ill prepared to discuss sexuality
issues with their children—84 percent in one survey said they need help
while 54 percent in another survey reported being unsure what to discuss
with their children about HIV/AIDS.1,60 At
the same time, parents in nine out of 10 U.S. families understand that
teaching the facts about contraception increases the use of protection
among teens who are already sexually active.1
Although many parents believe that they lack guidance for talking with
young people about sexuality, several national and community-based organizations
provide and support such programs. For example, every October since 1980, Let's
Talk Month has encouraged parents to become their children's first
sexuality educators. National organizations—such as Advocates for Youth
and Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA)— as well as state
and local coalitions have developed and presented parenting programs
on sexuality education. Unfortunately, most of these programs are not
well attended, and the people who attend may not be the parents in the
greatest need of such classes.
Communities continue to provide the strongest efforts to prevent teen
pregnancy and STDs in the United States. Local affiliates of the Young
Women's Christian Association (YWCA), Young Men's Christian Association
(YMCA), and Girls Incorporated provide after school programs for youth
as well as programs especially for teenage parents. Although many of
these programs are actually designed to increase life options for young
people rather than to deal specifically with sexuality, some of the programs
have been effective in delaying first intercourse and increasing the
use of contraception among sexually active youth.61,62,63
Other effective life options and youth development programs, replicated
in communities around the United States, include Teen Outreach Program
(TOP) and the Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Program of the Children's
Aid Society. TOP has demonstrated lowered rates of teen birth, course
failure, and school dropout while the other program has demonstrated
delayed first intercourse, increased use of contraception, and reduced
adolescent births.61,62,64 Two
community-based models that have shown promise include School/Community
Sexual Risk Reduction,65 currently
being replicated at several sites in Kansas, and the Plain Talk Initiatives,66 currently
implemented in five cities. In addition, national organizations—such
as Advocates for Youth, PPFA, the Sex Information and Education Council
of the U.S. (SIECUS), and the recently created National Campaign to Prevent
Teen Pregnancy—also provide technical support and assistance for state
and local coalitions in teen pregnancy prevention program design and
implementation.
Some sexuality education programs, such as Sex Respect, focus
on the dangers of sex and its negative consequences, as well as its supposed
psychological and emotional risks.67,68 Despite
inconclusive or negative findings from evaluations of such abstinence-only
or abstinence-until-marriage programs,61 many
conservative organizations, such as Focus on the Family, the Family Research
Council, Citizens for Excellence in Education, and Concerned Women of
America, provide strong support for these programs.
In the United States, parents and communities want youth to be sexually
healthy, and teens want accurate information, accessible services, and
discussions with their parents. Parents know that discussions with their
children about sexuality are important; but, most parents are uncomfortable
discussing sexuality with youth and uncertain how to do so. At the same
time, several studies show that most U.S. residents support sexuality
education for teens that teaches both abstinence and safer sex.69,70 While
some communities support abstinence-until-marriage education, other communities
promote balanced, realistic education—abstinence plus contraceptive and
safer sex education. Overall, communities and families in the United
States disagree or feel uncertainty as to the best means to promote adolescent
sexual health.
Key to attitudes about sexuality in the Netherlands is the view that
decisions about sexual behavior belong to the individual rather than
to community, church, or family. To support this individual ethic, the
community as a whole has a responsibility to provide open, honest, and
complete education that can empower the individual to avoid irresponsible
and unprotected sexual behavior.47,71 Open
and frank depictions of sexuality in the media are reinforced by equally
open and frank discussions in peer groups, schools, medical practices,
youth agencies, and families. This individual ethic requires that parents
and others support young people in fostering communication and healthy
relationship skills. The Dutch see these skills as key to reducing sexual
risk among adolescents. Parents accept that their young people will probably
become sexually active during their later teen years, and they openly
discuss sexuality and sexual behavior with their children.47,72
Most adults in the Netherlands expect young people to progress from
peer friendship groups to a phase of being attracted to potential partners,
then to a phase of sexual experimentation during which teens form a series
of short-term relationships that may or may not include sexual intercourse,
to the final phase of seeking long-term emotionally committed relationships.
Most Dutch parents also understand that experimentation is a natural
and healthy part of adolescent development.2
In street interviews with Dutch parents, study tour participants learned
that parents are usually uncomfortable watching their teens experience
these phases but also want teens to have a positive outlook on sexuality
and to become sexually healthy adults. Restrictive permissiveness describes
the approach most Dutch parents take with their teens—trying to pace
their youth in their sexual development and encouraging them to be informed
about all issues and to seek information from many sources. Most Dutch
parents expect their teens to use birth control.2
In the Netherlands, most parents provide support from a distance and
give teens permission to ask questions without incurring either judgment
or consequences.2 Few adults
attempt to scare youth about sex. Instead, most adults focus on sexual
choice and, therefore, give adolescents rights, respect, and responsibility.72 Relatively
few Dutch parents set age limits for teens to begin dating or become
sexually active. In one study, many Dutch parents reported forbidding
nothing; however, 50 percent of the parents reported providing guidelines
about love, serious relationships, and safer sex. Another 30 percent
of the parents indicated that they believe sexuality to be a private
matter and that they trust their teens to make good decisions. Finally,
20 percent of parents encourage their children to experiment during adolescence.
Most parents, however, also reported hoping their young people will not
date too early or experience sexual intercourse before they are ready.72
In Germany, the positive influences of public education campaigns are
reinforced by the sexuality education that youth receive from their parents,
most of whom regard sexuality as a natural part of human development.
In recent decades, the German courts, the Ministry of Education, and
laws regarding schools have all made sexuality education the primary
responsibility of parents even though previous studies indicated that
sexuality education received at home was often inadequate.50 A
recent survey indicates that parents consider sexuality education an
important preventive measure.73
In a recent random sample of German parents,74 percent indicated that
they would not be opposed to a teen, under 18 but in a steady relationship,
having sexual intercourse—with the use of contraception. In fact, 67
percent of the parents would allow their teens to have sexual intercourse
in the family home.20 Generally,
German families and communities support delaying first sexual intercourse.
In one study, many teens reported wanting to remain abstinent because
they felt too shy or too young, had no interest yet in sex, or had not
found the right person.74 In
another study, although some parents reported discussions about sexuality
with their children, 90 percent of parents reported that they would like
the schools to provide such instruction.34
Regarding parent-child communication, a survey among approximately 3,000
parents and 3,000 of their 14- to 17-year-olds found that:
- 73 percent of daughters and 53 percent of sons reported
receiving sexuality education from their parents.
- 69 percent of daughters and 49 percent of sons reported
their mothers as the most important source of information.
- Parents discussed different subjects depending on the
teen's gender. More discussions were held with daughters
in every subject area.
- Both genders received information about reproductive
anatomy, contraception, and STDs. Sexual practices, homosexuality,
and masturbation were less frequently addressed.
- Parents of lower socioeconomic status and more conservative
parents were less likely to discuss sexuality and more
likely to leave sexuality education to the schools and
other sources.73
Various community efforts work to help parents become better sexuality
educators of their own children. ProFamilia provides clinical services,
counseling, and sexuality education. Staffed with educators, social workers,
counselors, and doctors, the 150 ProFamilia centers throughout Germany
provide support to parents and teachers, leading skills-building and
educational sessions. Other German organizations also provide community-based
sexual health programs. For instance, the Love Tour is a mobile
sex education project, sponsored by the German Red Cross and FCHE. It
travels throughout eastern Germany to reach youth in need of services
and information in such environments as discos, clubs, and festivals.
Information about the influence of the family and community on adolescent
sexual attitudes, behaviors, and health is somewhat limited in the French
scientific literature. One study found that 60 percent of French adults
consider sex a private matter and are reluctant to discuss it.74 The
French people value individualism and respect young people's right to
make decisions regarding their sexuality. Parents provide little sexuality
education; in fact, most French parents do not feel comfortable talking
with their teens about sexuality issues.39 In
street interviews with citizens in Paris, study tour participants learned
that most respondents do not discuss sexuality in their homes or in the
homes of their friends.
Lack of openness about sexuality in families is attributed to the French
culture's placing a high degree of responsibility on the individual and
respecting the individual's privacy. While most French parents assume
that adolescents will be sexually active before marriage, they do not
explicitly encourage or permit it. Communities, therefore, place great
emphasis on sexuality education occurring within community and social
contexts.74
Sexuality education and programs supporting safer sex practices are
widely available to youth within most communities. The Documentation
Centre of the Mouvement Francais pour le Planning Familial (MFPF) and
the Regional Center for the Prevention of AIDS (CRIPS) work cooperatively
to protect the rights of people to be informed and protected from STDs,
HIV, unintended pregnancy, sexual exploitation, and sexual abuse. MFPF,
operating with 66 associations throughout the country, is popular with
young people for education and reproductive services. On Wednesday afternoons,
when French teens are out of school, clinicians, counselors and educators
are available for walk-in as well as previously scheduled appointments.
Further, medical and educational resources are free to young people under
age 18.
To support adolescent sexual health, the French rely heavily on mass
media combined with community outreach. Early and open communication
is established through mass media campaigns. Many young visitors to MFPF's
Wednesday clinics—designed especially for teens because schools dismiss
early—come because of mass media or word-of-mouth advertising. These
clinics are teen friendly, and providers work to adapt their services
to the developmental level of the clients. After-hours answering machines
provide information on alternative services as well as how to access
and use emergency contraception. On holidays like New Years Eve, some
clinics remain open all night to help adolescents in crisis situations.
Established religion plays an important role in the lives of residents
of the United States, and religion is frequently important in transmitting
values, including those related to sexuality, reproduction, and families.
While many religious institutions support contraception and the right
of women to choose abortion, others forbid abortion and contraceptive
use. In the United States, the religious right—a political movement whose
motive is to create public policy with a particular religious agenda
and call it "morality"—has a strong role in the creation of
many abstinence-only or abstinence-until-marriage programs and in the
formation of the conservative organizations that embrace them. The processes
in the United States, has successfully placed supporters on school boards,
county governing boards, and in state legislatures and twists public
policy to further a religiously-based agenda that is at odds with the
wishes and attitudes of most citizens of the United States.
By contrast, in the Netherlands, Germany, and France, residents generally
do not consider established religion relevant to values related to sexual
and reproductive health. Collective force, such as church dogma or legislative
dictum, does not determine the morality of sexuality in any of the three
European countries. Instead, individual freedom and responsibility form
the foundation of an ethic by which a person weighs the morality of his
or her sexual behavior. That ethic includes the values of responsibility,
love, respect, tolerance, and equity.
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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