More

A Third Of Sex Ed Classes Don't Teach Birth Control

MIKE STOBBE   09/15/10 03:26 PM ET   AP

Sex Ed

ATLANTA — Almost all U.S. teens have had formal sex education, but only about two-thirds have been taught about birth control methods, according to a new government report released Wednesday.

Many teens apparently are not absorbing those lessons – other recent data shows that after years of steady decline, the teen birth rate rose from 2005 to 2007. It dipped again in 2008, to about 10 percent of all births.

The report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is based on face-to-face interviews with nearly 2,800 teenagers in their homes from 2006 through 2008. Female interviewers from the University of Michigan asked the questions for the CDC.

About 97 percent of teens said they received formal sex education by the time they were 18. Formal sex education was defined in the report as instruction at a school, church, community center or other setting teaching them how to say no to sex or about birth control and sexually transmitted diseases.

Lessons about saying no and STDs were more common than instruction on how to use a condom or other birth control, the study found.

Overall, about two-thirds of teens got birth control instruction by the end of high school – about 62 percent of boys and 70 percent of girls.

In contrast, about 92 percent of boys and girls reported being taught about sexually transmitted diseases, and almost that many learned about preventing infection with the AIDS virus. And about 87 percent of girls and 81 percent of boys were taught how to say no to sex.

The study also found that younger teen girls were more likely than boys to have talked to their parents about sex and birth control, and how to say no to sex.

The report does not address trends in sex education. But many of the findings were similar to some CDC research conducted in 2002.

Other research suggests that comprehensive sex education declined from 1995 to 2002, and this report seems to indicate that it hasn't changed since then, said John Santelli, a Columbia University professor of population and family health.

Government policies stressing abstinence-only sex education were a large reason for that initial decline. Programs noted the threat of sexually transmitted diseases but not how to use birth control. Those policies were still in place when the CDC study was done, Santelli said.

But in the last two years, most of federal funding for sex education has been redirected to programs that discuss birth control as well as the importance of delaying sex, said Bill Albert, chief program officer for the Washington, D.C.-based National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy.

Another CDC study, released earlier this year, found that teenage use of birth control and teen attitudes toward pregnancy have remained about the same since 2002.

Previous CDC research found that that about 85 percent of high schools and 72 percent of middle schools teach human sexuality and sex education.

___

Online:

CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs

FOLLOW HUFFPOST HEALTHY LIVING

ATLANTA — Almost all U.S. teens have had formal sex education, but only about two-thirds have been taught about birth control methods, according to a new government report released Wednesday. M...
ATLANTA — Almost all U.S. teens have had formal sex education, but only about two-thirds have been taught about birth control methods, according to a new government report released Wednesday. M...
Filed by Meghan Neal  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 41
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eepah
The price of bootstraps grows ever higher
06:56 PM on 09/20/2010
You cannot call it sex education if you're not educating about birth control.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
beyondliberal
Forward, never straight.
03:16 PM on 09/19/2010
This is precisely why we need national standards for education. Again, we are the only developed nation on the planet not to.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inkongirl
02:05 PM on 09/19/2010
Whatever happened to giving them ALL the information so that they can make an informed decision? Teaching them to "just say no" doesn't seem to work very well.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KayAch7
Lets Be Pragmatic
12:16 PM on 09/19/2010
Again. You can lead the horse to the water, but you can't make it drink the water.

I don't find the strategy of teaching only abstinence effective. Teens are going to experiment any way. So its best they are given a full dosage of the responsibilities and consequences of sexual behavior. If you don't teach the class down to their level, you are automatically written off. Besides, there are movies and reality shows about teen pregnancy these days as if this lifestyle were the latest trend. Who are teens are gonna listen to? Go figure.
04:37 PM on 09/17/2010
Almost all sex education classes primarily teach "how to have sex", under the garb of teaching "safe sex".
11:18 AM on 09/20/2010
Ond what planet did you have your sex -ed class on?

We learned about both gender's biology, diseases, how to deal with peer pressure and how to put a condom on a banana. There was only one single illustration that showed actual intercourse and with it being a cut-away view of only the pelvis to show how everything lined up (which we already knew about) it was kinda creepy.

If anything, sex ed classes made me NOT want to have sex.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nicole Dixson
01:21 AM on 09/17/2010
Here we go again expecting someone else to teach our children. If we teach them what they need to know, what does it matter if the class is lacking? That goes for any subject-Sex Ed, Black History, Women in History, Horticulture, you name it. If the school won't teach them what they need to know, YOU do it!!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thinkingwomanmillstone
My life is microbiodegradable.
02:35 PM on 09/18/2010
absolutely right. It's a life long process. If you are too embarassed to teach your kids information that is potentially life saving in the privacy of your home, what makes you think a school teacher is going to do it in a class of 30. Also don't assume because you've talked about it once that they have gotten the message. Understanding comes with repitition.
05:47 PM on 09/16/2010
Parents, this is your wake up call! Talk to your kids, because they sure aren't going to get any education on this stuff from their schools! Let them know what your values are as a parent and what you expect in terms of their behavior, believe it or not they do actually listen when it comes to these issues. Don't judge them and don't preach, just offer guidance and the truth as you know it from your experiences. Don't be afraid to involve your family practicioner, especially when it comes to birth control. They have a lot of materials and can offer their medical viewpoint on the various types of birth control and the risks associated with them (or with not using them!).
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MorganT
12:36 PM on 09/16/2010
I graduated from a catholic high school a few years ago. The only thing we got other than if we took a class that studied the human reproductive system (A&P), was a woman who came to the school every 3 years and spoke to the girls in the school in the auditorium. Apparantly she traveleved around the country giving this talk to many many students in schools with religious-based education. Her talk consisted of telling us that there are 30 types of STD's and STI's and that women suffer from their effect but men do not, that men just spread them from woman to woman. If we get one of these diseases we will become sterile and may die from their complications. And she concluded by saying that we should stick to abstinence. It was not the best talk as far as "sex-ed" is concerned and this woman seemed to me to be more of an effectively convincing public speaker rather than being accurate. Seeing the look on many girls' faces after the talk you could tell she scared them. I think that was her goal all-along
04:38 PM on 09/17/2010
She is correct. all along, every point.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:13 PM on 09/18/2010
You think that she was correct in saying that men spread STDs and STIs without themselves having any effects from the diseases? Seriously?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sunnybunny
09:12 AM on 09/16/2010
This may be why I run into so many otherwise intelligent adults who think that "birth control doesn't work" or they "can't use birth control"? I would think 90-99.7%(depending on the method) is pretty good odds, and what are the odds that of the dozens of different kinds, none of them are going to work for a given individual?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SrAN
1st time proud pagan mom since May 16
07:09 AM on 09/16/2010
Sex education needs to stop being so taboo. When kids get to about the age of 12 (younger in some cases) they hear and understand many things from the things they hear and see on tv, in movies and on the school bus. We need to stop treating our children as naive and stupid and treat them like people. We need to include abstinence, STD's, birth control, pregnancy and the mental/emotional risks of having a sexual relationship with someone. Sex ed needs to be a well rounded course that covers everything. Finally, our parents need to realize that they cannot keep their children safe from sex if they are unwilling to talk about it. The opposite usually happens there, the "talk" usually consists of don't do it and it's over. No discussing it openly is only going to leave your child unprepared to handle that situation when it arises.
11:24 AM on 09/20/2010
Its just like what is happening with our drivers-ed courses. When I took mine in high school, they showed us several videos that showed horrible accidents (mostly re-creations) and interviews with accident victims. Scared the cr@p out me and definitely made me take the whole driver resposability thing seriously. Now they can't because it might upset a student.

We need to stop pretending the kids are either dumb or so sensative. Yes a few might need more talking to to help them understand, but honestly if you come to high school so sheltered that an actor portrayl of an accident messes you up that bad, you have many more thing to worry about that driving or sex-ed
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SrAN
1st time proud pagan mom since May 16
03:28 PM on 09/20/2010
Helicopter parents are the bain of the next generation. I understand the need to shelter kids to an extent but when they start to shelter out of the realms of reality is when there is a problem. Sure, we want to believe our kids are angels and that no harm will befall them but, IMHO, we are doing them more harm than good when we hide the harm or just pretend that it doesn't exist.
You really hit the nail on the head with your post. Faved.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph J Schuler
06:48 AM on 09/16/2010
Yet the idiots still trumpet abstinence only. I have also heard that some of these classes also tell students that latex condoms don't protect against STD's because some study suggested that HPV might be small enough to migrate through the latex material.

Of course the people that support this idiocy are dead set against the HPV vaccine as well.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MorganT
12:26 PM on 09/16/2010
I've heard this one before, except it wasn't HPV it was HIV! My friends' health teacher told her that the microscopic tears in condoms can let HIV pass through and that they shouldn't bother using them...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:39 PM on 09/18/2010
Actually, it's true that latex condoms can have flaws large enough for viruses to pass through - possible, but unlikely. nevertheless, they are far from useless in protecting against viral and bacterial STDs. This is just one of the anti-contraceptive talking points that the religious right wing parrots in their efforts to frighten people into sexual abstinence.

Don't get me wrong - there's nothing wrong with choosing abstinence for whatever reason people have (religious, emotional, spiritual), and it is in truth the only virtually guaranteed method for avoiding pregnancy and STDs (women who are abstinent can still, unfortunately, be victims of rape, so choosing abstinence is not 100% surety of pregnancy and STD avoidance). But people should choose based on facts, not urban myths.

Synthetic condoms and using a virucidal product with a condom can also increase the safety level.
04:58 AM on 09/16/2010
I don't even see how abstinence only education is even called "sexual education."

It would be like having a driver's ed class. But instead of teaching you how to drive safely and the rules of the road they just said, "DON'T DRIVE EVER BECAUSE YOU COULD DIE!" and that was it.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LiberalLee
Yes I am a witch. Deal with it.
01:52 AM on 09/16/2010
Huh?
Sex education without discussing pregnancy facts and prevention...
Seems to me that all the stuff about STD's belongs in a General Health Class, as it's called in England and most of Europe, since it's about disease and should range from measles, chicken pox right through to sexually transmitted diseases.
Sex, as a topic is considered by most of the people that frown upon 'sex education', is purely about human reproductive mechanisms and rituals. If the fact that preventative measures are often the wisest course, then leaving them out of class on the subject will of necessity, leave the students unprepared to a huge degree.
And if the parents of these kids are the ones responsible for their ignorance, well to me, THAT seems almost criminal. Those same kids often pay too high a price for their parents' tender sensibilities.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
cinemaven
Mom, wife, social & political activist, writer...
11:03 PM on 09/15/2010
My guys were given a pretty comprehensive sex education in school but I felt that it was our responsibility as parents to teach them about responsibility and reality... they were making water balloons with condoms in 5th grade (after they learned to put them on a banana). I have an 18 yr. old and a 23 yr. old who respect themselves and respect women.
12:13 AM on 09/16/2010
And you'll have the added bonus of most likely being more to your eventual grandchildren than the parents of the guy making child support payments, if that. Good for all of you!
09:42 PM on 09/15/2010
peace

peace education

peace inner peace is Bliss

" life is Bliss": Maharishi

in english words maharishi means the nearst Sanskrit word here ananda

in the 3 in 1 structure of SATCHITANANDA absolute bliss consciousness

relevence to sex education is:

hold up a higher carrot

Bliss is infinitely more than orgasm

and experience of satchitananda in TM program neutralizes stress

support the david lynch foundation