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Teen sex: More use rhythm method for birth control

Wed Jun 2, 2010 11:41 AM EDT
health, us, sex, teen, med
Mike Stobbe, AP Medical Writer
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ATLANTA — A growing number of teen girls say they use the rhythm method for birth control, and more teens also think it's OK for an unmarried female to have a baby, according to a government survey released Wednesday.

The report may help explain why the teen pregnancy rate is no longer dropping like it was.

Overall, teenage use of birth control and teen attitudes toward pregnancy have remained about the same since a similar survey was done in 2002.

But there were some notable exceptions in the new survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 17 percent of sexually experienced teen girls say they had used the rhythm method — timing their sex to avoid fertile days to prevent getting pregnant. That's up from 11 percent in 2002.

They may have been using another form of birth control at the same time. But the increase is considered worrisome because the rhythm method doesn't work about 25 percent of the time, said Joyce Abma, the report's lead author. She's a social scientist at the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics.

The survey results were based on face-to-face interviews with nearly 2,800 teens ages 15 through 19 at their homes in the years 2006 through 2008. Trained female interviewers asked the questions.

It found that about 42 percent of never-married teens had had sex at least once in their life. Of those teens, 98 percent said they'd used birth control at least once, with condoms being the most common choice. Those findings were about the same as in the 2002 survey.

The increase in the rhythm method may be part of the explanation for recent trends in the teen birth rate. The teen birth rate declined steadily from 1991 through 2005, but rose from 2005 to 2007. It dropped again in 2008, by 2 percent, to about 10 percent of all births.

"We've known the decline in childbearing stalled out. This report kind of fills in the why," said Bill Albert, a spokesman for the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy.

Teen attitudes may be big part of it. Nearly 64 percent of teen boys said it's OK for an unmarried female to have a child, up from 50 percent in 2002. More than 70 percent of teen girls agreed, up from 65 percent, though the female increase was not statistically significant.

The survey was conducted at a time of some highly publicized pregnancies of unmarried teens, including Bristol Palin, the daughter of former GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, and Jamie Lynn Spears, Britney's kid sister. The 2007 movie "Juno," a happy-ending tale of a teen girl's accidental pregnancy, was popular at the time.

___

Online:

CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Regions: Atlanta
  • Public Discussion (5)
Abresh

Well, the fact is that nature, no matter how much some people would like to disagree with it, says that females are supposed to start having children at between 11 and 13 years of age, on average today.

There is nothing that we can do to change that, and as soon as teenagers or even children first find out how wonderful sex feels? Abstinence goes OUT THE WINDOW. Really, abstinence is not something that is really sane in this world. If we were supposed to be abstinent until marriage, if 'god' existed, we wouldn't have genitals until marriage.

That we have them from birth (and fully functional outside of reproduction) kinda shows that we are supposed to be having sex from birth or quite soon afterward.

    Reply#1 - Wed Jun 2, 2010 5:20 PM EDT
    Tired_of_ExtremistsDeleted
    lee-1056586

    Abresh...where you dropped on your head as a child?

      #1.2 - Thu Jun 3, 2010 9:42 AM EDT
      Reply
      Youro

      You're absolutely right

        Reply#2 - Wed Jun 2, 2010 11:15 PM EDT
        tdk022755

        Well, this is certainly interesting since I will bet you that most of them do not even understand the rhythm method. And the stats on that form of birth control are not very good. Good luck to all of them who want to start raising children that early. They don't even have a clue as to what they are getting themselves into.

          Reply#3 - Thu Jun 3, 2010 2:41 PM EDT
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