June
25th
  1:17:00 PM

Schools push pills confidentially while more girls get abortions

Britain’s approach to the health and wellbeing of young people continues to provide a cautionary tale for parents everywhere. Nearly one in three (29 per cent) of secondary schools in England now has what people in the industry call a “sexual health clinic” providing at least condoms and pregnancy tests to children as young as 11. One in six schools gave pupils access to the morning-after pill or tests for sexually transmitted infections such as Chlamydia. And one in 20 of the clinics provides children with prescriptions for contraceptives -- the pill, injections or implants -- without their parents being informed, according to research by the Sex Education Forum, an organisation which welcomes the trend.

The figures were published just days after the government disclosed that in England and Wales there has been a 10 per cent rise in the number of abortions among girls under 16, and a 21 per cent rise for those under 14. The abortion figures prompted calls to make sex education compulsory in schools, starting with “relationships” education for 5-year-olds. Thirty MPs immediately signed a motion calling on schools to do more. The legal minimum is teaching human reproduction in science classes.

A doctor who runs a school clinic in Cornwall said it gave children a chance to get “confidential” support; if they went to a doctor’s rooms the might run into someone who knows them, including a friend or relative. He said he would prescribe the pill not on the basis of a girl’s age but their competence to give consent. “You may have someone who is 14 and does not understand the nature of the pill so we would not give it to them. But you may have someone who is 12 or 13 who does.” ~ Guardian/Observer, June 22

Access to the contraceptive pill became easier -- and so more risky -- this week in the UK with the launching of online sales by DrThom website. The company admits that it is unable to verify independently any information that users supply, and that “there’s nothing to stop somebody who’s, say, 17 lying about their age”. Other contraceptive and abortion providers plan to follow suit. ~ Guardian, June 23

 



 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to FamilyEdge
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
Why Sensible, Well-balanced Parents are Superior
10 Feb 2012
Daycare must focus on child, not adult needs, says new report
9 Feb 2012
About gender
7 Feb 2012
More time online = less happiness among girls
6 Feb 2012
Changing the way teens think
3 Feb 2012

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
Feb 2012 | Jan 2012 | Dec 2011 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

How hedonism became America’s official religion
9 Feb 2012
An edict from the Obama administration has ended the American experiment in religious liberty.

Bombs across the border
10 Feb 2012
The US makes a strong case that its military interventions in Pakistan are just and legal. Whether they’re good is…

A parental defence of highly effective nagging
10 Feb 2012
When a deadly habit becomes a useful tool in the parental armoury.

Lost in Transition III: A collective challenge
9 Feb 2012
Who is to blame for the moral ignorance of young adults, and what is to be done?

Pink Lego
8 Feb 2012
Why are feminists throwing their toys out of the cot over a victory for girl power?


 Tags
United States, education of children, self-control, single motherhood, family economics, social networking, prostitution, children's health, work-life balance, gender, abortion, morality, religion, internet, family structure, young adult, parental rights, ageing, teenagers, divorce, Hollywood, sexualisation of children, child obesity, child wellbeing, child safety, technology, baby boomers, child welfare, family relationships, gender equality, polygamy, family values, South Africa, psychology, mental health, immigration, Australia, family policy, adolescence, motherhood, AIDS, working mothers, poverty, France, fertility, research, New Zealand, cohabitation, women, fatherhood, books, family breakdown, brain, sexual behaviour, same-sex marriage, health, pornography, Obama, work, social media, friendship, commitment, sex education, marriage, video games, adoption, smacking, happiness, emerging adults, trafficking, education, Africa, child abuse, youth, birth control, unemployment, children, dating, fashion, violence, family, men, child development, abstinence, demography, childcare, contraception, China, media, character education, recession, girls, feminism, one-child policy, Spain, obesity, large families, United Nations, parenting, family meals, schools, suicide, television, fathers, media ethics, homosexuality,