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    CDC: Many teen moms didn't think it could happen

    ATLANTA (AP) โ€” A new government study suggests a lot of teenage girls are clueless about their chances of getting pregnant.

    In a survey of thousands of teenage mothers who had unintended pregnancies, about a third who didn't use birth control said the reason was they didn't believe they could pregnant.

    Why they thought that isn't clear. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention survey didn't ask teens to explain.

    But other researchers have talked to teen moms who believed they couldn't get pregnant the first time they had sex, didn't think they could get pregnant at that time of the month or thought they were sterile.

    "This report underscores how much misperception, ambivalence and magical thinking put teens at risk for unintended pregnancy," said Bill Albert, a spokesman for the Washington, D.C.-based National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy.

    Other studies have asked teens about their contraception use and beliefs about pregnancy. But the CDC report released Thursday is the first to focus on teens who didn't want to get pregnant but did.

    The researchers interviewed nearly 5,000 teenage girls in 19 states who gave birth after unplanned pregnancies in 2004 through 2008. The survey was done through mailed questionnaires with telephone follow-up.

    About half of the girls in the survey said they were not using any birth control when they got pregnant. That's higher than surveys of teens in general, which have found that fewer than 20 percent said they didn't use contraception the last time they had sex.

    "I think what surprised us was the extent to which they were not using contraception," said Lorrie Gavin, a CDC senior scientist who co-authored the report.

    Some of the teen moms were asked what kind of birth control they used: Nearly 20 percent said they used the pill or a birth control patch. Another 24 percent said they used condoms.

    CDC officials said they do not believe that the pill, condoms and other forms of birth control were faulty. Instead, they think the teens failed to use it correctly or consistently.

    Only 13 percent of those not using contraception said they didn't because they had trouble getting it.

    Another finding: Nearly a quarter of the teen moms who did not use contraception said they didn't because their partner did not want them to. That suggests that sex education must include not only information about anatomy and birth control, but also about how to deal with situations in which a girl feels pressured to do something she doesn't want to, Albert said.

    The findings are sobering, he added. But it's important to remember that the overall teen birth rate has been falling for some time, and recently hit its lowest mark in about 70 years.

    Albert said it would be a mistake to come away from the report saying, "They can't figure this out?" ''Most of them are figuring it out," he said.

    ___

    Online:

    CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr

     

    56 comments

    • Ravenne  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      When are people going to start realizing that keeping birth control knowledge away from kids isn't going to make them too scared to have sex; it's just going to make them have unprotected sex. The only way to keep your teen from having sex is to teach them your values as best you can. If they decide not to have sex it's going to be because of their own sense of right and wrong and self-respect, not because "Well, gee, I don't dare have sex because I'm clueless about birth control". (And I'm not saying that teaching your kid your values is any guarantee they won't have sex, but it's a heckuva lot more effective than keeping them clueless.)
    • Sasha  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Hallmark of the teen years; act first, think later. Which also applies to the boys because, let's be honest, those girls didn't get this way on their own.
    • freyatait  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Part of normal adolescent mental development involves what used to be called the "personal fable"--the adolescent's idea that she is unique and that things that happen to other people won't happen to her. A study of teenage mothers with unplanned births in England found that 80% of them knew how to use birth control and knew where they could have obtained contraceptives. Their reason for not doing so? "I didn't think it could happen to ME." Studies conducted by the CDC have also found that adolescents who know about, and have access to, contraception do not always use it consistently.

      Educating young people about sexuality and contraception is important, but it is by no means a guarantee that knowledge will translate into action. Even adults do not always do that which they know is right and best for them.
    • TOO OLD  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Worked in healthcare for 40 years. Lost count of the number of times I heard the plaintive lament: but we only did it one time.
    • J  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      The real issue isn't teaching birth control or abstinence, the real issue is teens and impulse control. Why do teens get pregnant? Number one boys don't face consequences the way girls do if there is a pregnancy so what do they have to lose. Number two sex without a condom feels much better. You can't leave it in the boys hands to make that decision. Number three as a teenager I hardly remembered to do my chores around the house let alone take a pill to keep from getting pregnant. Number four no method except for actual abstinence is fail proof. Some teenagers will be responsible and take precautions. But a good portion think they are invincible and regardless of the method taught or provided will still make choices that lead to unhappy consequences. Seriously they are teenagers!!!
    • MaloufromAkronohio  •  Akron, Ohio  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Sex should be discussed with teens on a regular basis. Parental views and expectations should be shared with said teen. If they only knew how expensive and hard it was to raise a child I guarantee that they would think twice before they took the chance.
    • Kirsten  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      I think it's great to wait until marriage to have sex, but I'm against abstinence-only teaching because of stuff like this. No matter how much you preach to teens to wait until marriage or until their older, some of them will still do it anyways. I hear about my classmates who do it all the time. My parents have been good in talking to me about sex, but I know a lot of other parents aren't. And all of these teen pregnancies show why I'm going to wait until I'm AT LEAST 18 (or preferably married) to have sex. By then, I'll be out of high school.

      In 8th grade sex ed, my teacher said "don't have sex without thinking that there's a possibility of becoming pregnant or getting a girl pregnant. Even if you use protection, it still can happen." That phrase is permanently imbedded in my head now.
    • Denver  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Many teen moms didn't think period.
    • GF  •  Stevens Point, Wisconsin  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      And yet people still think the answer is "abstinence only" sex ed.
    • Scythe Falling  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Teenagers naturally take risks. They get themselves into dangerous situations and think that they will be immune to consequences. They aren't stupid, but their brains are still developing.
    • Bill  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      NOTHING CHANGES ...When I was a high school student in 1957...Yes more than 50 years ago...Girls got pregnant (before the pill) and didn't know why it happened. It seems that with all the information around...sex in the media and sex education...teenage boys and girls still do stupid things...wow am I surprised...
    • Charleston  •  Charleston, South Carolina  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      You can thank abstinence education forced on schools by the religious right. They are of the see no evil- hear no evil - say no evil group. Young people are not given the information they need and pregnancy is the result
    • Mrs Fliege  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      A reminder to parents to talk to your teens about sex.
    • Beverly  •  Moscow, Idaho  •  1 mth 3 days ago
      Welcome to public school education. Students can't read, can't spell and can't do math, who can blame them for thinking they can't get pregnant?
    • Aaron  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      In other words, teenagers are idiots... yeah, that's not exactly surprising. This is why we need better education.
    • 19MCJ50  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Teens have always been stupid about the possibility of pregnancy.
    • Grey Wolfe  •  Richardson, Texas  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Cause and effect still exist.
    • Independent1  •  Juneau, Alaska  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Teenagers are by definition people at the height of their stupidity. Of course they're not going to consider the consequences of casual sex, reckless driving, careless decisions, etc.
    • keep goin'  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      Idiocracy - the least intelligent, the most like pro-create!
    • Mark  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  1 mth 4 days ago
      All the "sex-free" posts below...we've all been teenagers, you know how powerful hormones are. It doesn't matter that you are now a "mature adult." You WILL NOT change teens' hormones by logic...trust me.

      Don't try and repeat history, you all know how abstinence-only works. And if you don't, be prepared to be a grandparent. No matter how much you pound your heads against the wall, teens still have hormones....they will find a way to be stupid. Give them as much (real) knowledge as possible. And if they F up, love them and their child. It's better than the alternative.
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