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Teen Pregnancy Pact: Symptom of Larger Problem

June 20, 2008 01:54 PM ET | Deborah Kotz | Permanent Link | Print

I was shocked and appalled to read the Time magazine piece published online Wednesday about a pregnancy pact at Gloucester High School in Massachusetts that led to 17 pregnancies over this past school year in girls age 16 and younger. This is four times the number of pregnancies that the 1,200-student school had last year, according to Time. Apparently, a number of girls made a pact to get pregnant in order to bring someone into the world who would love them unconditionally. The school also provides immense support for teenage parents, allowing them to bring their babies to a school daycare center. After administering more than 100 pregnancy tests to students this year, the story says, the school nurse in Gloucester was so desperate that she wanted to start handing out contraceptives without parental consent.

The debate over how to prevent teen pregnancy is one that's raging throughout the country. Is it better to teach teens about contraception or just encourage them to abstain from sex until they're married? Just yesterday, women's health advocates were celebrating a planned budget increase of $15 million in Title X family planning services, which provide contraception and reproductive health services to low-income women and men. They were also happy to see that funding for abstinence-only education programs was not slated to be increased. (I was, though, dismayed to hear that a planned amendment to the funding bill probably won't be included in the final legislation. It would have allowed drug companies to once again sell deeply discounted birth control pills to college health centers—a practice that had to stop last year under new Medicaid rules.)

But I think the solution shouldn't focus solely on sex education. (The girls in Gloucester got sex-ed classes—although the classes ended freshman year of high school, according to Time.) I think educators need to address the larger problem: how to foster self-esteem, long-term goals, and pursuit of dreams in girls from broken families facing economic hardships. Supposedly, the Gloucester community is suffering a severe decline in its fishing industry, which almost certainly has put a strain on families. And desperation often drives some girls to get pregnant—perhaps a way to ensure that some piece of them will survive. I think we all need to realize that handing out condoms isn't the complete answer. I previously reported on what's needed for real pregnancy prevention in an article about abstinence education.

Tags: pregnancy | teen pregnancy | teens

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Reader Comments

You are...

...very intelligent.

Self Esteem Problem In Today's School Systems

Self esteem in school children doesn't exist because there is no way to foster it in modern school systems. Competition isn't encouraged any more. In many areas, no one keeps score any more. A-F grading has disappeared so we don't "hurt anyone's feelings". There is no incentive to have drive or to excel. In an effort to shelter the few from "self esteem" problems, our society has created an entire new batch of esteem problems. All of our social policies are a "good idea" but in reality, they don't pan out the way most think they should. We need to return to fundamental conservative values that made this society great in the first place. Give kids something to shoot for. Give them real hope. Give them a sense that they can accomplish great things instead of letting the accomplish mediocre things in an effort to not hurt anyone's feelings. There are winners and losers in life. Kids need to learn to winners. Sheltering them with liberal social values is NOT the way to teach them to be winners. The change needs to happen in the school systems, the government, the media, and definitely at home.

Abstinence?

I'm not so sure that abstinence education is going to help, in situations like these The purpose of love isn't necessarily procreation; these are kids whose purpose in life is to bang out kids as quickly as possible in order to supplant a drastic gap in self-esteem. The only thing abstinence education will give these girls is a lemming-like rush into likely-unrewarding marriages.

What's needed for real pregnancy prevention is not only contraception for people who want to enjoy child-free sex, but the intellectual and spiritual outlook necessary to grow themselves as individuals. It's not the sex-ed class that's failing them - that seems to be working - but rather, a failing of their educational system in general.

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About On Women

Deborah Kotz, senior writer for U.S. News & World Report, covers everything women care about when it comes to their health. She's often tapping out "Oprah-esque" confessions about how the latest news relates to her personally—whether it's on breast cancer, contraception or easing work-family stress. She'd love to hear your confessions too at onwomen@usnews.com.

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