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Teen Birth Rates Down, But is Every WV Teen Getting Facts?

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Thursday, September 26, 2013   

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Teen birth rates in West Virginia and around the nation have dropped to historic lows, according to new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) figures. The proportion of West Virginia teens having children has fallen by more than fifteen percent since 1988. The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy finds more teens are delaying sex, and more are using contraceptives.

Paula Gianino with Planned Parenthood said she is encouraged by the numbers, but noted that the trend does not apply in all areas.

"We see in both rural and urban areas of low socioeconomic status, high rates of teen pregnancy and teen childbirth."

Gianino says one way to keep teen pregnancy rates low is for parents to talk frankly to their children about sex. She says in families that use positive communication, kids are more likely to make good choices.

Gianino says teens are inundated with sexual messages in the media and among friends, although many in West Virginia can graduate without getting solid information about sexuality and reproduction.

"They leave school without receiving any sexual-health education at all. Schools simply leave it out," she said "because they believe it's too, 'controversial.'"

Many organizations in West Virginia and around the nation offer information to parents on how to speak to their children about sex. They stress that it should be more than a one-time talk, but rather, ongoing and age-appropriate information, on topics from how pregnancy occurs to how to treat other people with respect.

Gianino agreed that in these discussions, parents need to take the lead.

"When we can increase communication in the home, teens feel more supported, and they just do better - not only around sexual decision-making, but a whole host of other issues."

Nationwide, the CDC said, teen birth rates dropped 6 percentage points in 2012, to 29 births per 1,000. The report found that the teen birth rates varied by ethnicity, with the highest rate for Hispanic and African-American teens, and the lowest rate for Asians.

The CDC report is at http://www.cdc.gov. Information for parents to give children is available at http://answer.rutgers.edu.




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