James Meikle, health correspondent
Guardian. Wednesday May 29, 2002
www.guardian.co.uk
Britons' secrecy and embarrassment over
sex helps explain the failure to control the high level of births among
teenagers, a United Nations report suggested yesterday.
The US is the only developed nation with
a higher proportion of teenage mothers than the UK but both are failing to
prepare young people for the world they are growing up in, with its
increasing number of sexual images in the media.
Contraceptive advice and services might
be formally available in Britain, but as one teenager told Tony Blair's
social exclusion unit: "It seems as if sex is compulsory but
contraception is illegal."
The report, compiled by Unicef's
Innocenti research centre, in Florence, Italy, is a boost for those who
argue too little rather than too much sex education lies behind Britain's
failure to deal with the social problems that face poorly-educated young
mothers.
Figures in the report revealed that in
1998 16.6 births per 1,000 women in the UK were to women aged 15-17 and
51.8 per 1,000 were to 18-19-year-olds. Only the US, with 30.4 births per
1,000 and 82 per 1,000 respectively, had higher rates. The British rate
for the younger group was 10 times that for Japan but also nearly eight
times more than in Sweden and the Netherlands, where there is a more open
attitude towards sex.
Only 50% of Britain's under-16s used
contraceptives during their first experience of sex.
Research for the Unicef report by the
Institute for Social and Economic Research at Essex University suggested
that British women who had their first child under 20 were twice as likely
to be without a partner in their 30s than women who gave birth for the
first time in their 20s. The former teenage mothers were also three times
more likely to be in a home where neither they nor a partner was working.
The Dutch example of a low teenage birth
rate indicates that sex can be discussed before "barriers of
embarrassment can be raised and before sex education can be interpreted as
sending a signal that the time has come to start having sex."
But countries like New Zealand, Britain
and the US have more of a rich/poor divide and relatively fewer teenagers
in higher education.
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