Sunday, February 18, 2007

Contraception Education

Should sex education be a statutory subject in schools?
Last October the Institute for Public Policy Research called for PSHE (Personal Social and Health Education), including SRE (Sex and Relationships Education), to be made a statutory subject in all schools in England and Wales. Read Contraception Education's news report on http://www.contraceptioneducation.com/nitem.asp?news_id=300
The recommendation comes in a report called 'Freedom's Orphans: Raising Youth in a Changing World' published in November 2006. The report shows that British teenagers are the most sexually active in Europe and are third least likely to use a condom during underage sex. Britain has the highest rate of births to teenagers in Western Europe, with an average of 26 live births per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19, and the sexual health of British teenagers is considerably poorer than it was a decade ago.
The report recommends that pupils should be taught about the importance of contraception in their last year of primary school, and that a full range of contraception should be made easily available to teenagers. Other recommendations include services for parents to be made available at schools, and action to reduce the numbers of teenagers becoming pregnant for a second time. Further details are available at the IPPR website .

But should all young people get the same sex education?
A study published in the Journal of Health Psychology Vol. 12, No. 1, 179-183 (2007) concludes that pupils should be taught sex and relationships education according to their experience. The survey by researchers at Coventry University of 3,800 13 to 16-year-olds found that their sex life is so varied that safer sex cannot be encouraged with one standard model. A quarter had had sex and most had not used condoms the first time. Fifty-five per cent had used contraception every time. The study suggests that 'streaming' sex education lessons could be achieved by teaching in after school youth groups and by using sex education CDs that pupils can use privately. However, the researchers conclude that whole class teaching may be appropriate for advice on using condoms and where to get them from and they recommend that condoms should be available in all schools. An abstract of the study report is available:http://hpq.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/12/1/179 Guardian, 9 February 2007, p13; Telegraph, 9 February 2007, p2


And what about the age of consent?
The age of consent different all over the world. See http://www.avert.org/aofconsent.htm. It ranges from 12 to 18, and different laws are still applied to different sexual preferences. It makes me wonder why when as a health professional I know that it is hard for some young people to receive safe sex messages because some young people are afraid to say they are sexually active in case they get into trouble with the law.

The law in the UK is quite complicated. On my Resources page I have looked the law and sex in the UK http://www.contraceptioneducation.com/sdays.asp?news_id=20

In an interview with the Independent on 15th February, Matthew Waites, lecturer in sociology at University of Glasgow and author of 'The Age of Consent:Young People, Sexuality and Citizenship', says that the current law on the age of consent does not work and needs to be lowered. He argues that the law criminalises young people and creates a climate of denial among parents and some professionals, which prevents young people from seeking advice and assistance about sexual health and sexual behaviour. (Independent Education, 15 Feb 2007, p4)

2 comments:

Geoff V said...

I agree that children should be taught about contraception, but I feel that parents should play a bigger role too. During the time the children are at primary school the parents should be given resources and after school classes so they can start the process them selves. Then when the teacher covers the subject in class there will be more targeted teaching done. Being married to a teacher I know the spread of subjects they have to cover, and in Trafford the last year at primary is also Eleven Plus time which, in most cases, would take preference.

from Marketing Crew said...

A good blog that should get people thinking about sex ed and peoples approach to educating children...