TEENAGE BEHAVIOR
Several different studies have shown that teen
sexual behavior has in recent years changed in some vital ways. In a recent NBC News Special, where selected teens
from around the country were interviewed, several dangerous trends were openly discussed. There was lots of talk about oral/anal sex being
practiced by young people, and they questioned whether that would be considered as
having sex. Wonder where they got
that idea? It was suggested that intercourse
occurs more quickly in newly formed relationships today, and that every facet of sex is
easily discussed among their peers. This fact
and the openness of discussing sex in media today no doubts contributes to how quickly
relationships result in sexual activities. It
also came out that sexual activities come about more readily today because of
partying and the influence of alcohol and other drugs. It was indicated that there are very few who set
limits for themselves about how far they would go with a date and to my recollection
abstinence was not even seriously discussed.
The program candidly reported that too many teenagers are experiencing pregnancies
and STDs. They threw out the same statistics
we mention in the Abstinence programs, how that 80% of these teenage pregnancies are
unintended
that 9 million teenagers and young adults
acquire an STD each year
and that 2 young people every hour become infected with HIV!
It was their answer to the problems that
was different, we all share the same problems! Their
answer was safer sex, but no mention was made of no sex
Abstinence until
marriage. Also, since this crowd seemed to be
kids from the higher income families, there was not much said about ruining their career
chances --
A.
As a part of reporting the facts about teen sex
behavior today, we must include the following considerations:
1.
Future prospects for teenagers decline
significantly if they have a baby.
2.
Less likely to complete school and
more likely to be single parents.
3.
Less than one-third ever earn a high school
diploma and only 1.5% earn a college degree by the age of 30.
B.
There are serious health risks for adolescents
who have babies.
1.
Common medical problems among adolescent
mothers include poor weight gain, pregnancy-induced hypertension, anemia, sexually
transmitted diseases (STDs), and cephalopelvic disproportion.
2.
Later in life, adolescent mothers tend to be
at greater risk for obesity and hypertension than women who were not teenagers when they
had their first child.5
C.
Teen Pregnancy and Poverty
1.
Teen pregnancy is closely linked to poverty
and single parenthood.
2.
One-half of all teenage mothers and over
three-quarters of unmarried teen mothers began receiving welfare within five years of the
birth of their first child (1990 Study).
3.
Single-parent families remains the single most
important reason for increased poverty among children over the last twenty years (1998
Economic Report of the President)
D.
Out-of-wedlock childbearing (as opposed to
divorce) is currently the driving force behind the growth in the number of single parents,
and half of first out-of-wedlock births are to teens.
E.
Therefore, reducing teen pregnancy and
child-bearing is an obvious place to anchor serious efforts to reduce poverty in future
generations.
F.
Teen pregnancy is bad for the child...
1.
Children of teen mothers often receive
inadequate parenting.
2.
Children born to teen mothers are at higher
risk of poor parenting because their mothers and often their fathers as well
are typically too young to master the demanding job of being a parent.
3.
Still growing and developing themselves, teen
mothers are often unable to provide the kind of environment that infants and very young
children require for optimal development.
4.
Recent research, for example, has clarified
the critical importance of sensitive parenting and early cognitive stimulation for
adequate brain development.
5.
Given the importance of careful nurturing and
stimulation in the first three years of life, the burden born by babies with parents who
are too young to be in this role is especially great.
G.
Children born to teen mothers suffer from
higher rates of low birth weight and related health problems.
1.
The proportion of babies with low birth
weights born to teens is 21 percent higher than the proportion for mothers age 20-24.
2.
Low birth weight raises the probabilities of
infant death, blindness, deafness, chronic respiratory problems, mental retardation,
mental illness, and cerebral palsy.
3.
In addition, low birth weight doubles the
chances that a child will later be diagnosed as having dyslexia, hyperactivity, or another
disability.
H.
Children of teens often have insufficient
health care.
1.
Despite having more health problems than the
children of older mothers, the children of teen mothers receive less medical care and
treatment.
2.
In his or her first 14 years, the average
child of a teen mother visits a physician and other medical providers an average of 3.8
times per year, compared with 4.3 times for a child of older childbearers.
3.
And when they do visit medical providers, more
of the expenses they incur are paid by others in society.
4.
One recent study suggested that the medical
expenses paid by society would be reduced dramatically if teenage mothers were to wait
until they were older to have their first child.
I.
Children with adolescent parents often
fall victim to abuse and neglect.
1.
A recent analysis found that there are 110
reported incidents of abuse and neglect per 1,000 families headed by a young teen mother.
2.
By contrast, in families where the mothers
delay childbearing until their early twenties, the rate is less than half this level
or 51 incidents per 1,000 families.
3.
Similarly, rates of foster care placement are
significantly higher for children whose mothers are under 18.
J.
In fact, over half of foster care
placements of children with these young mothers could be averted by delaying
child-bearing, thereby saving taxpayers nearly $1 billion annually in foster care costs
alone.
K.
Children of teenagers often suffer from poor
school performance.
1.
Children of teens are 50 percent more likely
to repeat a grade; they perform much worse on standardized tests; and ultimately they are
less likely to complete high school than if their mothers had delayed childbearing.
L.
And bad for us all...
1.
The U.S. still leads the fully industrialized
world in teen pregnancy and birth rates by a wide margin.
2.
In fact, the U.S. rates are nearly double Great
Britains, at least four times those of France and Germany, and more than ten times
that of Japan.
3.
Teen pregnancy costs society billions of
dollars a year.
4.
There are nearly half a million children born
to teen mothers each year.
5.
Most of these mothers are unmarried, and many
will end up poor and on welfare.
6.
Each year the federal government alone spends
about $40 billion to help families that began with a teenage birth.
7.
Teen pregnancy hurts the business
communitys bottom line.
8.
Too many children start school unprepared to
learn, and teachers are overwhelmed trying to deal with problems that start in the home.
9.
Forty-five percent of first births in the United
States are to women who are either unmarried, teenagers, or lacking a high school degree,
which means that too many children tomorrows workers are born into
families that are not prepared to help them succeed.
10.
In addition, teen mothers often do not finish high
school themselves.
11.
Its not easy for a teen to learn work skills
and be a dependable employee while caring for children.
M.
A new crop of kids becomes teenagers each year.
1.
This means that prevention efforts must be
constantly renewed and reinvented.
2.
And between 1995 and 2010, the number of girls
aged 15-19 is projected to increase by 2.2 million. --NBC News Special
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