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New
Data Shows Decline
in Teen Sexual Activity
Excerpt
By Melinda
T. Willis, ABCNews.com
Fewer teens are having sexual intercourse, says new data released
today by the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. Over a
10-year period from 1991 to 2001, the percentage of high school
students who ever had sex dipped from 54.1 percent to 45.6 percent.
The study did not address other types of sexual activity, such
as oral sex.
The fall was witnessed in teens of both sexes as well as black
and white students. Additionally, the percentage of those who
reported having multiple sex partners fell 4.5 percentage points
in the same time period among males, 11th and 12th grade students
and blacks and whites, from 18.7 percent to 14.2 percent.
Multifaceted Problem, Multifaceted
Approach
"The fact that this is a sustained trend over a period of years
is telling us that this isn't just a blip on the radar screen,"
said Michael Resnick, a sociologist and professor of pediatrics
and adolescent medicine at the University of Minnesota Center
for Adolescent Health and Development in Minneapolis. "It looks
like young people are embracing a more thoughtful way of approaching
some of these desicions and certainly seem to be making some healthier
and more self-protective decisions."
Experts credit no one approach to bringing about this decline,
stating that the combined input of a number of different approaches
to curbing teen sex and pregnancy are likely responsible.
"We need those who are yelling about abstinence, and those who
say we need birth control, and we need those who say we need education,
and we need the parents involved, the schools involved, the churches
involved, everybody," said Dr. Maryanne Felice, professor and
chair of the department of pediatrics at the University of Massachusetts
Medical Center in Worcester. "I would hope that all of the professionals
don't start arguing about who gets the credit. This is a multifactorial
problem that requires a multifactorial solution."
At the same time that there is optimism, there is concern that
the rates while lower, still hover around 50 percent of the teenage
population, showing there is still room for improvement.
"It's better, I'm not complaining," said Felice, who points
out that it is too soon to tell whether the numbers will continue
their fall. "I remember when it was higher than that, so we are
making slow steady trends. It doesn't happen suddenly."
Added Resnick, "Even when trends are going in the right direction,
we have to reaffirm our commitment to evidence-based work and
keep our eye on what works for kids."
Reference
Source 104
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