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Russian doctors have been told to inform police about 'all cases when virginity was lost'
A ROW has erupted in Russia over virginity checks for underage schoolgirls.
Doctors have begun implementing an order from the Russian Investigatiive Committee - seen as the equivalent of the FBI - demanding that all medical evidence of sex involving under 16 girls should be reported to the police.
The edict has led to an angry backlash with claims that girls will avoid going to clinics even when they have sexually transmitted diseases or pregnancies.
Russia's health ministry has joined newspapers and social media in lashing out at the virginity checks for under 16 girls.
Vladimir Shuldyakov, health minister in Saratov region, provoked the storm by publicly ordering medics to obey the investigative committee's instructions.
Doctors must "inform police about all cases when virginity was lost as well as about cases of pregnancies and abortions involving girls under 16 yeaes old", he demanded.
Specifically, the order instructs doctors to check girls "and report all cases when the integrity of the hymen is damaged".
The Russian Health Ministry put itself at loggerheads with the Investigative Committee in attacking the move in Saratov with Omsk region also believed to carry out the checks " in secret".
Yelena Uvarova, chief gynaecologist for children and adolescents, branded the virginity tests "absolutely unacceptable" and questioned their legality.
Newspaper Moskovsky Komsomolets warned the checks would lead to a "sad result".
"Imagine a young girl in love, her sleepless nights, her pleasures and horrors and her wish to hide her secret," said its report
"And she gets health problems - a sexually transmitted disease or suffers another gynaecological condition.
"Does she go to the doctor who will find out about her 'damaged hymen' and report her to the police?
"And her tender secret will then go on a police record and later reach her parents, teachers and classmates?
"For sure this girl will not go to the doctor and then who knows how it will affect her future life and health."
One social media critic said underage sex should be a problem for families to resolve "not government bodies".
Another complained: "The minister and police have nothing else to do....we live in medieval times."
An opponent added: "Why do they want to report about girl only? What about boys who are
not virgins....I am against early sex but reporting it to the police is idiotic."
There were predictions that it would lead to doctors being bribed by wealthy parents to sign papers that their daughters were still virgins even if are were not.
But many commenters agreed with the move.
"I worked at a school and watched 14 year old students who went out with with much older men.
"And I have known girls who had abortions at such an early age.
"Children should study and not have sex. But it is a complex problem.
"Look at those music TV channels, so vulgar, and there is so much dirt in the internet and on social networks.
"Somebody is deliberately seducing young people in Russia."
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Banished from her Yeshiva prep-school clique a teenager from Manhattan's Upper West Side decides to reinvent herself as a downtown riot girl.

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The woman had waited years to become sexually active, only to end up with an upsetting discovery when she had unprotected sex.
It’s one of the biggest sexual myths out there: That only “immoral” people get sexually transmitted infections (STI).
The misconception is one doctors like Ginni Mansberg are keen to stamp out, as in reality STIs can be contracted by anyone and have “got nothing to do with morality”.
Dr Mansberg has worked as a Sydney GP for almost 30 years and told news.com.au podcast Kinda Sorta Dating some of the people she sees diagnosed with STIs would be considered the “most conservative” members of society.
“I am thinking of one girl who waited until she was 29 to lose her virginity to her boyfriend, who she was with for six months before they took a condom off, Dr Mansberg told host Jana Hocking.
“She got a triple whammy – she got chlamydia, herpes and an abnormal Pap test in one go, but you cannot call her a fallen woman.”
Who gets a STI had “nothing to do with morality and it’s got a lot to do with luck”, Dr Mansberg said.
One STI was so common, it was easier to assume most people you met have it – herpes. Dr Mansberg said that around one in eight people have been diagnosed with the virus at some point.
“Herpes, oh my goodness, I diagnose that all the time,” she said. “Herpes is super common.”
There was also a surprise rise in STI diagnoses in one age group: middle-aged people who find themselves single for the first time in decades.
“They have forgotten the whole condom thing, they’re used to not wearing a condom, “ Dr Mansberg said.
“We’ve been seeing a big uptick in newly single women and men – unfortunately it’s more women because men really don’t get a lot of symptoms from a lot of these STIs so for better or for worse these blokes they often spread it around.”
The popular personality recently discovered she’s one of only 5 per cent of all women who experience this rare act in the bedroom.
There’s one habit that we’re all guilty of – and it’s killing our sex lives. But there’s an easy solution, says Jana Hocking.
Researchers discovered this secret hack to the female orgasm decades ago, but Nadia Bokody says few men are aware of it.

A NOTE ABOUT RELEVANT ADVERTISING: We collect information about the content (including ads) you use across this site and use it to make both advertising and content more relevant to you on our network and other sites. Find out more about our policy and your choices, including how to opt-out. Sometimes our articles will try to help you find the right product at the right price. We may receive payment from third parties for publishing this content or when you make a purchase through the links on our sites.
Nationwide News Pty Ltd © 2022. All times AEDT (GMT +11). Powered by WordPress.com VIP
More stories to check out before you go
The woman had waited years to become sexually active, only to end up with an upsetting discovery when she had unprotected sex.
It’s one of the biggest sexual myths out there: That only “immoral” people get sexually transmitted infections (STI).
The misconception is one doctors like Ginni Mansberg are keen to stamp out, as in reality STIs can be contracted by anyone and have “got nothing to do with morality”.
Dr Mansberg has worked as a Sydney GP for almost 30 years and told news.com.au podcast Kinda Sorta Dating some of the people she sees diagnosed with STIs would be considered the “most conservative” members of society.
“I am thinking of one girl who waited until she was 29 to lose her virginity to her boyfriend, who she was with for six months before they took a condom off, Dr Mansberg told host Jana Hocking.
“She got a triple whammy – she got chlamydia, herpes and an abnormal Pap test in one go, but you cannot call her a fallen woman.”
Who gets a STI had “nothing to do with morality and it’s got a lot to do with luck”, Dr Mansberg said.
One STI was so common, it was easier to assume most people you met have it – herpes. Dr Mansberg said that around one in eight people have been diagnosed with the virus at some point.
“Herpes, oh my goodness, I diagnose that all the time,” she said. “Herpes is super common.”
There was also a surprise rise in STI diagnoses in one age group: middle-aged people who find themselves single for the first time in decades.
“They have forgotten the whole condom thing, they’re used to not wearing a condom, “ Dr Mansberg said.
“We’ve been seeing a big uptick in newly single women and men – unfortunately it’s more women because men really don’t get a lot of symptoms from a lot of these STIs so for better or for worse these blokes they often spread it around.”
The popular personality recently discovered she’s one of only 5 per cent of all women who experience this rare act in the bedroom.
There’s one habit that we’re all guilty of – and it’s killing our sex lives. But there’s an easy solution, says Jana Hocking.
Researchers discovered this secret hack to the female orgasm decades ago, but Nadia Bokody says few men are aware of it.

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