HEALTH & SCIENCE
Doctors can bridge sex knowledge gap for teensPhysicians and other health care professionals are sources of information on pregnancy and disease prevention for about half of adolescents surveyed.By Susan J. Landers, AMNews staff. Aug. 23/30, 2004. Washington -- It should come as no surprise that teens think they know it all. But when it comes to contraception and protection from sexually transmitted diseases, the gap between what they think they know and what they actually do know is tragic. Teens are disproportionately affected by the nation's epidemic of STDs, including HIV. By age 25, one of two sexually active young people will acquire a sexually transmitted disease, according to a University of North Carolina study released last spring. And a lack of understanding might be one of the key problems. While the majority of the 500 teens age 15 to 17 who participated in a recent Kaiser Family Foundation phone survey knew about birth control pills, more than one in four of that majority didn't know that oral contraceptives offer no protection against sexually transmitted disease. The survey was part of an education campaign by Kaiser and Seventeen magazine, called SexSmarts, which is intended to increase teens' knowledge about sex. And for many, the findings were not unexpected. "I think the survey reflects what I see in my general practice," said Michelle Barratt, MD, associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Texas Medical School in Houston. [...]Full text of AMNews content is available to AMA members and paid subscribers.
Copyright 2004 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
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