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Teen pregnancies tied to tastes for sexy TV shows

Mon Nov 3, 2008 9:39 AM EST
health, tv, sex, pregnancy, med, teen-pregnancy
Lindsey Tanner, AP Medical Writer
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— Groundbreaking research suggests that pregnancy rates are much higher among teens who watch a lot of TV with sexual dialogue and behavior than among those who have tamer viewing tastes. "Sex and the City," anyone? That was one of the shows used in the research.

The new study is the first to link those viewing habits with teen pregnancy, said lead author Anita Chandra, a Rand Corp. behavioral scientist. Teens who watched the raciest shows were twice as likely to become pregnant over the next three years as those who watched few such programs.

Previous research by some of the same scientists had already found that watching lots of sex on TV can influence teens to have sex at earlier ages.

Shows that highlight only the positive aspects of sexual behavior without the risks can lead teens to have unprotected sex "before they're ready to make responsible and informed decisions," Chandra said.

The study was released Monday in the November issue of Pediatrics. It involved 2,003 12- to 17-year-old girls and boys nationwide questioned by telephone about their TV viewing habits in 2001. Teens were re-interviewed twice, the last time in 2004, and asked about pregnancy. Among girls, 58 became pregnant during the follow-up, and among boys, 33 said they had gotten a girl pregnant.

Participants were asked how often they watched any of more than 20 TV shows popular among teens at the time or which were found to have lots of sexual content. The programs included "Sex and the City," "That '70s Show" and "Friends."

Pregnancies were twice as common among those who said they watched such shows regularly, compared with teens who said they hardly ever saw them. There were more pregnancies among the oldest teens interviewed, but the rate of pregnancy remained consistent across all age groups among those who watched the racy programs.

Chandra said TV-watching was strongly connected with teen pregnancy even when other factors were considered, including grades, family structure and parents' education level.

But the study didn't adequately address other issues, such as self-esteem, family values and income, contends Elizabeth Schroeder, executive director of Answer, a teen sex education program based at Rutgers University.

"The media does have an impact, but we don't know the full extent of it because there are so many other factors," Schroeder said.

But Bill Albert, chief program officer at the nonprofit National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, praised the study and said it "catches up with common sense."

"Media helps shape the social script for teenagers. Most parents know that. This is just good research to confirm that," Albert said.

Still, U.S. teen pregnancies were on a 15-year decline until a 3 percent rise in 2006, the latest data available. Experts think that could be just be a statistical blip.

And Albert noted that the downward trend occurred as TV shows were becoming more sexualized, confirming that "it's not the only influence."

Psychologist David Walsh, president of the National Institute on Media and the Family, cited data suggesting only about 19 percent of American teens say they can talk openly with a trusted adult about sex. With many schools not offering sex education, that leaves the media to serve as a sex educator, he said.

"For a kid who no one's talking to about sex, and then he watches sitcoms on TV where sex is presented as this is what the cool people do," the outcome is obvious, Walsh said.

He said the message to parents is to talk to their kids about sex long before children are teens. Parents also should be watching what their kids watch and helping filter messages sex-filled shows are sending, he said.

___

On the Net:

American Academy of Pediatrics: http://www.aap.org/

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Indy TX

"Groundbreaking?"

The next groundbreaking research will be that the sun rises in the east and that bears you-know-what in the woods. How do I get a job researching painfully obvious things?

    Reply#1 - Mon Nov 3, 2008 11:49 AM EST
    YoNaturals

    Hahaha... indeed! There is no question that the current state of the media degrades our social values, and mostly affects our impresionable youth. Supporters of the media always say that the "art imitates life." Clearly it is the other way around, if you can even possibly call the average piece of filth on T.V. "art."

      Reply#2 - Mon Nov 3, 2008 2:14 PM EST
      LerianisDeleted
      YoNaturals

      Note: For the record, this conversation has nothing to do with my company - this is my personal opinion...

      Unfortunately, you misunderstand your own argument. At what age children should start having sex, and societal values such as whether people should have sex out of wedlock, are entirely different conversations. I completely agree that women are engineered to start having children WAY earlier than our society currently encourages; woman are not meant to wait until they are almost 30 and then pop out 2 kids and call it a life.

      However, what this article is talking about is encouraging promiscuous, irresponsible sex that is not healthy for either the individual or society. The fact is that the vast majority of young people (as with the vast majority of people in general) are simply impressionable sheep, and will follow the herd.

      Unfortunately, the unprecedented influence of television is an evolutionary novelty, the power of which has never been seen on the planet before this century. A small minority can control (and do control) this channel of influence and have used it to tear down societal values for personal profit.

      You are mostly correct in your solution: what we need is to stop raising children on television, and instead return to familial values and teachings, with open and frank discussions about sex - and young people should absolutely not be allowed to make their own decisions about sex at a young age if it can be helped. I think we can ALL agree that we did at least a few things in our youth that could have been very harmful (or that actually ended up being very harmful). It is the parents' job to prevent these sorts of happenings.

        #2.2 - Sun Nov 9, 2008 12:00 PM EST
        Reply
        Aud-Smiles

        I honestly find this study serverely flawed and therefore take it with a grain of salt. TV isn't the big issue here it appears to be more of an issue of lack of parenting or edujcation about sex. Also the study didn't address wether or not some of these pregencies were planned. It may seem hard to believe but I know some Teens or young mothers whom planned to have kids young in life to do things with them. Read

        "2,003 12- to 17-year-old girls and boys nationwide questioned by telephone about their TV viewing habits in 2001. Teens were re-interviewed twice, the last time in 2004, and asked about pregnancy"

        If you interview a 17 year old girl in 2001 and than again in 2004 in that 3 years that girl is no longer a teen she is young, 20, but not a teen. Also the study said that the majority of the girls were in the upper age range that reported pregnancy.

        But, yes it is believable that a child with out good parenting and self-esteem, may coincidently watch Friends (who didn't watch Friends when it was popular) and get pregnant. Yes maybe they felt influenced by the show but that's probably not the reason they had sex.

        Also education is important and if a child is going to be sexually active there should be a way that she or he can get on some form of birth control even if the age they choose to have sex is seemingly too young, because once a teen get it in their head they're going to do something they are probably going to do it, with or with out TV influences.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#3 - Sat Nov 8, 2008 7:41 AM EST
        ThaPyngwyn

        Maybe I missed it, but nowhere did I see how they addressed causality. How do they know for certain that teens who are behaviorally more likely to become teen mothers weren't also more likely to watch "sexy" TV shows? That would be my first conclusion. I mean, I like science and I watch TV shows about science, but watching TV shows about science didn't make me like it; it was already there.

          Reply#4 - Sun Nov 9, 2008 11:41 PM EST
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