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Children as young as 12 feel pressure to have sex
Children lack the knowledge and confidence to say no
to sex or to keep themselves safe as they come under pressure from their
peers to experiment, the charity ChildLine says today. Rather than wait
until they are emotionally prepared for sex, children as young as 12 are
turning to alcohol to help to get them through losing their virginity.
Most are too embarrassed, confused, drunk or illinformed to think about
the risks of pregnancy or sexually transmitted infections, so
contraception is barely even considered, a charity report says.
Anne Houston, director of ChildLine, which has merged
with the NSPCC, said that callers to the charity spoke of lives in which
sex and alcohol were far more readily available than information on how
to deal with them. She said that most of the 5,800 calls last year about
pregnancy came after young people had engaged in risky sexual behaviour.
Publication today of the ChildLine report coincides with a survey
produced jointly by the teen magazine Sugar and the NSPCC, which found
that 45 per cent of teenage girls had had their bottom or breasts groped
against their wishes. The web survey of 674 Sugar readers revealed an
abusive undercurrent to much of their early sexual experimentation.
The ChildLine report is based on 5,843 calls that it
received from children about pregnancy last year. Three quarters of
callers were 15 or under; most (5,459) were girls. ChildLine counsellors
suggest that children believe that contraception is expensive, and that
they do not know where to get free condoms. They also wrongly think that
visits to their doctor are not confidential. Some girls say that they do
not know how to use condoms; others believe that the Pill will make them
fat. One counsellor said: “Callers tell me that, in their biology
lessons, they might be shown how to put a condom on a cucumber, but they
aren’t told how to actually go out and get condoms and then use them.”
Ms Houston said that she believed that children who called ChildLine
were broadly representative of the population. “One of ChildLine’s
strengths is that we know children from all walks of life use the
helpline,” she said.
The report calls for a review of personal, social and
health education in schools, noting that laws are confusing. Schools are
required by law to teach only the biological aspects of sex,
contraception and sexually transmitted infections, and these are often
covered in science lessons. Learning about sexuality, relationships,
choice, delay, safer sex, risks and pregnancy are only outlined in
government guidance.
Alexandra Frean
22 May 2006
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2191307,00.html
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