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| More on Teen Pregnancy |
www.Teenpregnancy.org
- How
big is the problem? Teen
pregnancy and births rates declined steadily during the 1990s. However,
despite these declines, four out of ten girls in this country still
get pregnant at least once before age 20. There are nearly one million
teen pregnancies each year and about half as many teen births.
- Why
should we care about teen pregnancy and childbearing? Compared to women who delay childbearing, teen mothers are less likely
to complete high school and more likely to end up on welfare. The
children of teen mothers are at significantly increased risk of low
birth weight and prematurity, mental retardation, poverty, growing
up without a father, welfare dependency, poor school performance,
insufficient health care, inadequate parenting, and abuse and neglect.
U.S. taxpayers shoulder at least $7 billion annually in direct costs
and lost tax revenues associated with teen pregnancy and childbearing.
- What
are the current trends in the teen pregnancy and birth rates? After increasing 23 percent between 1972 and 1990, the teen pregnancy
rate for girls aged 15-19 decreased 19 percent from its all time high
in 1991 to 94.3 pregnancies per 1,000 girls aged 15-19 in 1997 (the
most recent year that national data are available). The teen birth
rate increased 24 percent between 1986 and 1991. Since then, the rate
has fallen 20 percent to 50 births per 1,000 women aged 15-19 in 1999.
- How
does the United States compare with other countries? The
United States has the highest rates of teen pregnancy and birth -
by far - of any comparable country.
- Why
has the teen pregnancy rate declined? Both
less sex and more contraceptive use are making important contributions
to the decline in the teen pregnancy rate. That is, teen pregnancy
rates have been declining because a smaller proportion of teens were
having sex and the pregnancy rate among sexually active teens decreased
due to better contraceptive use (and also, perhaps, to less sexual
activity among those with some sexual experience).
- How
many teen pregnancies are intentional? The vast majority (78 percent) of pregnancies among teens are not
fully planned or intended.
- How
many teen mothers are married? At present, 79 percent of births to teen mothers are out-of-wedlock
- a dramatically different picture from 30 years ago when the vast
majority of births to teen mothers were within marriage. In fact,
nearly half of all non-marital first births in the United States occur
to teens.
- Is
teen sexual activity declining? Between 1970 and 1990, the proportion of teen girls aged 15-19 who
were sexually experienced increased from 29 to 55 percent before declining
to 51 percent in 1995. The proportion of never-married teens males
aged 15-19 who were sexually experienced decreased from 60 percent
in 1988 to 55 percent in 1995.
- Are
teens having sex earlier? Two of the most reliable measures of teen sexual activity (the National
Survey of Family Growth and the Youth Risk Behavior Survey) both indicate
that teens are having sex earlier. In fact, sexual activity has declined
among all teens except for those under the age of 15. And, according
to 1999 YRBS data, 8.3 percent of students report having had sex before
age 13 - a disturbing 15-percent increase since 1997.
- What
about teen contraceptive use? Contraceptive
use among teens is a very mixed bag. While the percentage of teens
using contraception the first time they have sex has been steadily
increasing since 1982, the percent of teens using contraception the
last time they had sex is declining. Between 30 and 38 percent of
teens that use contraception use it inconsistently. Additionally,
three out of 10 teen girls were completely unprotected the last time
they had sex.
- How
does the American public view teen pregnancy? The overwhelming majority of adults and teens believe that teens should
not be sexually active but those who are should have access to contraception,
according to a 2001 National Campaign survey. However, a clear national
consensus exists that school-age teens should not have sex - more
than nine of ten adults (95 percent) and teens (93 percent) said it
is important that teens be given a strong abstinence message from
society. Advocating abstinence while also providing teens with information
about contraception is not a "mixed message," according
to large majorities of adults (70 percent) and teens (74 percent.)
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