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Too much sex on the brain
There was a fascinating report published recently
about teenage brains. Jay Giedd at the American National Institute of
Mental Health discovered in doing scans of young people, that their
brains are still “under construction” — sometimes up to the age of 25.
The human brain matures gradually, and the prefrontal cortex dealing
with judgment is not properly formed until the twenties. Because of this
immaturity of the front part of the brain, teenagers are naturally
inclined to reckless and risky behaviour. The implications of this
finding surely have direct relevance for sex education. Sex educators
often argue for more “choice” and an ever earlier start to sex education
to halt the curve of early-teenage pregnancies. But it is clear from Dr
Giedd’s study that young teenagers cannot always handle “choices”
because their brains are in such a state of formation that “choice” may
be translated as an invitation to risk-taking.
The theme is illustrated by the latest findings about
early teenage abortion. The number of girls aged 14 and under having a
termination of pregnancy has just exceeded 1,000 a year for England and
Wales. The Pregnancy Advisory Service which performs many of these
abortions on the under-15s says that “abortion can be a solution” for a
14-year-old’s pregnancy. Yes, it can be: but the better solution would
be an expectation of care, protection and supervision to prevent such
pregnancies being risked in the first place. More “information” about
sex education and contraception has not, so far, achieved this aim. This
is not because young teenagers are bad, wilful or irresponsible: it is
because of the half-baked state of their brains which may interpret
“choice” as an exciting stimulus to reckless choices and the thrill of
the risk. Dr Giedd’s findings can be applied to drugs. Because teenage
brains are immature, cannabis — which older people can sometimes use
without harm — has a much higher likelihood of inducing psychotic
episodes among under-16s. It is not kind to be laid back about this.
Teenagers can be intellectually brilliant in some
spheres, and they have often been remarkably brave — teenage soldiers
are recklessly courageous — precisely because of this risk-taking
element in the composition of their brains. But it is cruel to expose
them to neutral “choices” in sex education rather than protecting them
from their mental immaturity.
Mary Kenny
21 February 2005
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3284-1493310,00.html
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