Archive for the ‘Sex education’ Category

A New Epidemic

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

The Center for Disease Control has just published a new report, and we don’t like the results one bit. According to the CDC, 1 in 4 teenage girls in the U.S. has a sexually transmitted infection. Here is a breakdown of the findings according to the Wall Street Journal: 

“An estimated 3.2 million girls ages 14 to 19, or about 26% of that age group, are infected, and the rate is highest among black girls, the study found. Nearly half the blacks surveyed had at least one sexually transmitted infection, compared with 20% among both whites and Mexican-American teens. The vast majority — about 18% — were infected with strains of human papillomavirus, or HPV, that can cause genital warts and cervical cancer, the CDC said.”

The 2008 National STD Prevention Conference in Chicago, where this important information was officially announced today, provided revealing information about contraceptive use and STI testing among young girls. The CDC released findings from a separate study that showed that even though most (82%) sexually active 15 to 24 year old women received contraceptive or STD/HIV services, only 39% receive both which indicates that many women at high risk are not receiving necessary prevention services. 

So why, exactly, are these numbers so shockingly high?  

What many people, including Planned Parenthood of America, consider the root of the problem is the lack of comprehensive sex education. “The national policy of promoting abstinence-only programs is a $1.5 billion failure and teenage girls are paying the real price,” the organization’s president Cecile Richards said. 

What is probably most staggering is the racial disparity these studies show. Of the total amount of chlamydia cases, young black women were found to make up nearly half of the cases. The director of the CDC’s STD prevention division John Douglas points to limited access to health care as a possible cause, an obstacle that creates delays in seeking care, fewer doctors visits, and is completely unacceptable. 

How do we combat these STI rates? With the help of organizations like the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS). The advocacy group has a strong record of providing accurate information and comprehensive education about sexuality, sexual health, and sexual rights. For the past 40 years SIECUS has been pushing for effective public policy in sex-related issues and created much needed (as the CDC has shown) reliable sexual health information for educators, health professionals, and communities around the country.

Sweet Seventeen.

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Good news for Iowans! Just last week the state’s Governor Chet Culver agreed to reject hundreds of thousands of federal dollars for abstinence only education, which will make the state the seventeenth to reject the federal funding under Title V.  The title provides approximately 40 million dollars in funding nationwide for the ineffective and purely ideological sexual education method, and in the past year there has been a huge trend of rejecting these funds. Culver made his decision following insistence from teen pregnancy prevention organization, FutureNet. 

Rhonda Chittenden, executive director of the organization, said, “Iowa must end this poor fiscal and public health policy now. There is no reliable evidence to date that these abstinence-only programs impact the long-term behavioral outcomes at which they aim, such as the delay of sexual initiation and reduction of adolescent pregnancies and STI/HIV infections.” 

FutureNet’s commitment to progressive change in their state has caught our eye and earned them the title of Hero of the Week! Here is their kick ass mission statement:

The mission of FutureNet is to support within Iowa a leadership network concerned with issues of adolescent pregnancy prevention, parenting, and sexual health.

The organization is not only pressuring Governor Culver to abstain from abstinence-only but also has several other programs that promote positive and effective sex education. Their TxT (Talking Sex Together) campaign merges youth-friendly text messaging with sex education to encourage communication that will help prevent teen pregnancy and inform teens about safe sex. Also worthy of mentioning is the organization’s initiative called Touchstones: Sexual Health Measures that Matter. This multi-year project aims to ensure that by 2012 all sex education in the state of  Iowa will be designed and implemented according to science-based practice.

Great job, Futurenet!

Repro Health Hub’s Hero of the Week!

Thursday, February 28th, 2008

pep.bmp With so much positive and progressive work going on around the country, those of us at the Repro Health Hub would like to take a moment out of each week to give the spotlight to some of the awesome organizations that are working hard to promote equality and reproductive health, rights and justice by initiating our Hero of the Week!   Without further ado, our first Hero of the Week is (drumroll please!)… 

The Pro-Choice Public Education Project!   Based out of  New York City, the project is an empowering resource for young women looking to develop their leadership skills and become more active in the promotion of reproductive justice. Just check out their mission statement: 

To educate young women and the organizations that serve them about reproductive health, rights, and justice in order to develop a new generation of leaders. 

Aside from leadership development and effective pro-choice campaigning, the Public Education Project (PEP) also conducts research initiatives in reproductive health. Their latest undertaking (which comes out this spring! We can’t wait!) will focus on African-American,  Latina, and Asian Pacific Islander women and provide a quantitative study on these populations’ perspectives regarding reproductive health, rights, and activism.  Be sure to check out their website for volunteer opportunities near you or to download some of their great campaign material! 

A big cheers and thanks from your friends here at the Repro Health Hub!

Teens take sex ed into their own hands.

Friday, January 11th, 2008

Comprehensive sex ed.  Teens want it, and some state officials are starting to pay attention. 

In Florida, Democratic lawmakers are proposing a bill to include curriculum about contraceptives, as opposed to promoting only abstinence.  Though the bill will maintain that abstinence is the only absolute way to prevent getting pregnant or contracting STDs, it will allow for students in the 6th grade onwards to receive education about contraceptives, their benefits and their side effects.   

As promoted to be “middle-ground” between what conservatives want and what liberals want, this bill addresses the reality that teens are talking about sex and have more questions than they do answers.   

In the meantime, New York City high school students are trying to get that very fact across to City Councilmembers.  Ten courageous Bronx teenagers stood in front of City Council last November, defending that comprehensive sex ed should be mandatory in New York City schools.  As it stands now, principals have the final say in approving the comprehensive sex curriculum that was passed by the city’s Department of Education in October 2007.   

The young female activists, who originally started this project to fight for comprehensive sex ed while volunteering at a non-profit organization, have continued to rally for their rights through starting a petition, creating a MySpace page, and disseminating self-designed brochures on sex.  It’s apparent that these teens are more aware than their lawmaking counterparts of the discrepancy between teen pregnancy rates in the Bronx and those rates citywide. 

Now that’s teen power at its finest.

By Pooja Awatramani