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jake-head-shot.jpgJake Young is a MD/PhD student at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in NYC getting a PhD in Behavioral Neuroscience. He holds a BS and MS in Biological Sciences from Stanford University. If a volcano were to erupt Pompei-style in Central Park, his body would be preserved in a scoliotic posture over his lab desk. Archeaologists would later conclude that he spent most of his day training rats to perform tricks, until he went blind building electrical equipment by hand using a dissecting microscope. But, still, he died happy...because science is cool.

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Teens Not Engaging In More Sex

Category: Culture WarSex
Posted on: January 29, 2009 11:33 AM, by NotoriousLTP

I was struck by this post over at the Well blog. In spite of media attention, teens are not engaging in more sex:

The news is troubling, but it's also misleading. While some young people are clearly engaging in risky sexual behavior, a vast majority are not. The reality is that in many ways, today's teenagers are more conservative about sex than previous generations.

Today, fewer than half of all high school students have had sex: 47.8 percent as of 2007, according to the National Youth Risk Behavior Survey, down from 54.1 percent in 1991.


A less recent report suggests that teenagers are also waiting longer to have sex than they did in the past. A 2002 report from the Department of Health and Human Services found that 30 percent of 15- to 17-year-old girls had experienced sex, down from 38 percent in 1995. During the same period, the percentage of sexually experienced boys in that age group dropped to 31 percent from 43 percent.

The rates also went down among younger teenagers. In 1995, about 20 percent said they had had sex before age 15, but by 2002 those numbers had dropped to 13 percent of girls and 15 percent of boys.

"There's no doubt that the public perception is that things are getting worse, and that kids are having sex younger and are much wilder than they ever were," said Kathleen A. Bogle, an assistant professor of sociology and criminal justice at La Salle University. "But when you look at the data, that's not the case."

If you contrast the data with the hysteria you see in the news -- "Your kids are having sex now, and they are going to die from AIDS!" -- it makes all these moralistic reformers seem like parochial fuddy-duddies -- ranting about the good ol' days when women were in the home and children were taught to be silent.

The craze for teenage sexuality has been used by some groups to justify all manner of policies: from censoring television to remove sexual content to abstinence education. Since the data suggests that teenage sex is getting better, not worse, do you think we could repeal some of these? We could start with the ones that clearly don't work, like abstinence-only education.

Just saying, when you use a premise to justify a reduction in our freedom and that premise turns out to be wrong...well, we want the freedom back.

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Comments

1

It doesn't work like that. Once the fish takes the bait, the hook sets, and you're dinner.

The game of governance is always for keepsies, never for funsies.

Posted by: Rose Colored Glasses | January 29, 2009 1:06 PM

2
The craze for teenage sexuality has been used by some groups to justify all manner of policies: from censoring television to remove sexual content to abstinence education. Since the data suggests that teenage sex is getting better, not worse, do you think we could repeal some of these?

I agree, teen sex is getting better and better. But the problem here becomes one of "well it's been working so well, why should we remove it?"

Posted by: Damien | January 29, 2009 1:24 PM

3

From everything I hear in the news and from my parents, I assumed more and more teenagers were engaging in sexual activities. As a teenager myself, these statistics are a relief and a good sign. I think adults underestimate our generation and assume the worst. We are more independent and maybe "rebellious", but we are also better educated on health and sexual education.

Posted by: Meghan | March 22, 2009 9:10 PM

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