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Boarding Schools for Girls Blog

Read the latest news and information about girls boarding schools, single sex classrooms, and girls learning styles.

Study Says Abstinence Programs Can Help

The United States has the highest teen pregnancy rate of any developed country. But a recently completed two-year study indicates that abstinence-only programs may help reverse that trend.

A Feb. 10 MercuryNews.com article by correspondent Tom McMahon provided the following information about the study, which was led by John B. Jemmott III, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania:
  • Students were assigned to attend one of five classes.
  • With 662 urban students between the ages of 11 and 13 participating, researchers found that only 33.5 percent of the students who went through classes that focused on abstinence started having sex in the next two years.
  • In contrast, 48.5 percent of students who attended other classes, including details on contraception, became sexually active.
"One of the things that's exciting about this study is that it says we have a new tool to add to our repertoire," Monica Rodriguez, vice president for education and training at the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States, said in Rob Stein's Feb. 2 Washington Post article.

Labels: pregnancy, sex-education

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Texas Parents Turning to Gynecologists to Educate Adolescent Daughters

According to an April 13 article by Houston Chronicle writer Cindy George, many Texas parents are turning to medical professionals to provide their daughters with the health information that students aren't getting in school. As George put it, increasing numbers of parents are asking the family gynecologist to have "the talk" with their adolescent daughters:
These are the conversations that establish an early doctor-patient relationship, building trust with young women so they're comfortable calling or visiting the gynecologist as they get older.

"I want to meet these young women before they really, really, really need me," said Dr. Tammy Vu, an obstetrician/gynecologist at West Houston Medical Center. ...

Providing medically accurate information can enlighten girls [who are] receiving limited information at school, hearing possibly outdated advice from their parents, and trading whispers with friends often riddled with misinformation.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends that teens visit a gynecologist for the first time at age 13, 14, or 15 for preventive health appointments that don't usually involve an internal pelvic exam.
Even pre-teens are now making visits to gynecologists' offices, George reports, as experts recommend that girls receive Gardasil, the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, between the ages of 11 and 12.

Labels: health, sex-education, girls, adolescents, HPV

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Studies Contribute to Sex Ed Controversy

About 750,000 Americans ages 15 to 19 years old become pregnant every year. Although most experts agree that there is a need to teach teenagers about sex and contraception, how to do that remains controversial. Now two new studies are adding to the controversy.

A study published in the journal Pediatrics found that the majority of sexually active teenage girls had heard of the Emergency Contraception Pill but did not know how to use it.

Emergency Contraception, sometimes known as the "morning after" pill, can prevent conception if taken within five days of unprotected intercourse.

Researchers interviewed African-American girls at a children's hospital in Philadelphia and found that half of them had heard of this pill. However, the majority of the sexually active teens did not understand when to take it.

A second study published in Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health found that teens do not necessarily believe that abstinence and sexual activity are opposites.

"Kids can believe in abstinence, but also intend to have sex," said N. Tatiana Masters, a doctoral candidate at Washington University and author of the study.

She and her colleagues studied 365 students ages 12 to 15 years old before and after they took part in an intervention designed to reduce risky sexual practices. A year after the program, the percentage of boys who were sexually active increased from 11 percent to 22 percent. Among girls, the increase was from 4 percent to 12 percent. The teens who intended to abstain from sex at the beginning of the study were less likely to engage in it by the end of the study.

However, the story was more complex than that. The ones who felt most strongly about either abstaining or participating in sex were the ones most likely to become sexually active.

Labels: school, sex-education, birth-control

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