Really Teens Sex

Really Teens Sex




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The percentage of teens in the U.S. who have had sex has ticked down since the 1980s, a new report finds.
The latest estimates β€” which are based on data gathered from 2011 to 2015 β€” are that 42 percent of girls and women ages 15 to 19 who have never been married have had sex, down from 51 percent in 1988, according to the report. For guys who have never been married, 44 percent have had sex, down from 60 percent in 1988.
These trends follow another pattern that researchers have observed in previous studies: Teen birth rates are also on the decline, according to the report published today (June 22) by researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. [10 Facts Every Parent Should Know about Their Teen's Brain]
Indeed, the researchers found that the surveyed teens' views on pregnancy played a large role in their decisions about whether to have sex and their likelihood of using contraception.
In the report, the researchers analyzed data on more than 4,000 teens ages 15 to 19 who were interviewed for the National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) from 2011 to 2015. The NSFG is a national survey of people ages 15 to 44 in the U.S. that involves in-person interviews conducted by the survey researchers.Β 
The majority of teens in the survey said that when they had sex for the first time, it was with someone with whom they were in a relationship: 74 percent of teenage girls and women said their first partner was a significant other, and 51 percent of teenage boys and men said the same.
A very small percentage of teens β€” 2 percent of teen girls and women and 7 percent of teen boys and men β€” said that their first partner was a person that they had "just met," the report found.
Among the teens who hadn't had sex yet, the most common reason was that it was against their religion or morals. Other common reasons included not having found the right person and not wanting to get pregnant or to get someone pregnant.
The new report also looked at contraception use among teens.
The researchers found that 80 percent of teens reported using contraception when they had sex for the first time. And amongΒ teenage girls and women who'd had sexΒ more than once, a whopping 99 percent reported that they had ever used some form of contraception when they had sex.
Teens cited condoms as the most common form of contraception they used during sex, with 97 percent of girls and women and 95 percent of boys and men saying that they had ever used condoms. Also, 60 percent of teen girls and women reported having used the withdrawal method (the report did not give the percentage of boys and men who reported using this method), and 56 percent of teen girls and women reported ever using birth control pills, according to the report. [7 Surprising Facts About the Pill]
The researchers also found that a larger percentage of teen girls and women said they would be "very upset" if a pregnancy occurred compared with teen boys and men. Nearly two-thirds of teen girls and women said they would be very upset if they got pregnant, compared with 46 percent of teen boys and men who said that they would feel the same if they got a girl pregnant.
Indeed, teenage girls and women who said that they would be very upset about a pregnancy were also more likely to use contraception compared with those who said they would be pleased with a pregnancy, the researchers found.
And one in five teens who have never had sex cited not wanting a pregnancy as their primary reason for avoiding intercourse.
Originally published on Live Science.
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Not for the first time, we've been hearing that teenagers now are having less sex than previous generations.
A cursory search of the question "are teenagers having less sex?" throws up 1.5 million results in the UK, including numerous articles categorically stating that the answer is "yes" - and it's probably all to do with social media.
The latest headlines appear to come from a report by the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS), looking at what's behind declining teenage pregnancy rates.
So what is it basing this assertion on?
The charity surveyed a representative group of 1,000 teenagers and found that they placed a high importance on studying, and spending time with family.
It also flags Ofcom figures which suggest that "the amount of time young people spend online has increased by 45.5% over the last 3 years".
And it points out that only a minority of young people under the age of 16 (about 30%) report being sexually active.
From this, the report hypothesises that, "this pattern of social interaction may be contributing to the decreasing rate of teenage pregnancies."
Its author, head of policy research Katherine O'Brien, told BBC Reality Check that the research couldn't show a decline in teenage sexual activity, since it only captures one period of time.
She pointed to the fact that a significant minority of teenagers surveyed said they "rarely or never" used contraception (14%) and suggested the fall in teenage pregnancy, despite this, could be because teenagers are having less sex than previous generations.
But she stressed that this is speculation, and she "wouldn't want to infer too much".
As the report itself points out, we don't know how many "episodes" of unprotected sex this represents, so this 14% may represent young people who have "only had sex on one or two occasions".
Easier access to emergency contraception may have also contributed to the decline in teen pregnancy rates - and we don't know whether the teens surveyed who said they "rarely or never" used contraception included the morning-after pill in their responses.
We do have some national data from the most comprehensive survey of sexual behaviour that has been done in the UK, the National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal). It was conducted by researchers at University College London in 1990-91, 1999-2001 and 2010-12.
It found that the proportion of under-16s who are sexually active (the 30% figure) hasn't really changed since the late '90s, although the average age of first sexual experience had been falling since the mid-twentieth century.
The proportion of 16-18-year-olds who say they have had sex increased between the first survey in the early '90s and the third survey in the early 2010s.
A lot of the media reports point to the fall in teen pregnancy rates as evidence of a drop in sexual activity - but all we can tell for sure from this is that unprotected sex is on the decline, or use of the morning-after pill on the up, or both.
This might be partly down to the highly successful 10-year government Teenage Pregnancy Strategy, which focused on improving access to and education around contraception.
The BPAS report does point to "improved access and more effective contraceptive methods" as a "key factor in the decline of teenage pregnancy rates."
There is some international evidence, particularly from the US, to suggest their teenagers may be having less sex, but British data on this subject simply doesn't exist.
And there's a further complicating factor - sex surveys in general are notoriously unreliable. This is partly evidenced by the fact that heterosexual men often report having had more sexual partners than heterosexual women do.
So as for whether teenagers are having less sex: we don't really know how much sex teenagers are having now. And we don't really know how much sex they used to have.
In fact, we don't really know how much sex anyone is having.
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