Teen Sex Habits Have Changed a Lot in the Past 20 Years, Say Scientists

In 2014, the Mindy Project crashed through social barriers by becoming the first show to feature anal sex on broadcast TV. While it left more prudish viewers blushing, a huge new study on sexual norms suggests that the episode, titled “I Slipped,” simply addressed what everyone is already thinking about. On Sunday, the scientists behind the study reported that the biggest change in sexual practices in the past twenty years has been an increasing appetite for butt sex.

In the paper, published in the Journal of Adolescent Health, the British researchers behind the study report that the proportion of adolescents — people aged 16 to 24 — who have had vaginal, oral, and anal sex has risen dramatically in the past two decades, according to data on 45,000 people. In 1990-1991, only one in ten people said they’d tried it. About ten years later, between 2010 and 2012, that proportion jumped to one in four for men and one in five for women.

The taste for oral and anal sex seems to be increasing in popularity among teens, the researchers noted. Of all the age brackets they examined, people aged 16 to 18 had the largest increases in the prevalence of oral and anal sex.

The biggest increases in anal sex prevalence were in adolescents aged 16-18.

While the data the researchers used focuses only on British teens — the National Surveys of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles is the country’s biggest ongoing scientific sex study — American studies have shown similar trends. It shouldn’t really come as surprise, the researchers suggest in their paper, seeing as perspectives and ideas around sex are widening in general.

“The changes in practices we see here are consistent with the widening of other aspects of young people’s sexual experience, and are perhaps not surprising given the rapidly changing social context and the ever-increasing number of influences on sexual behaviour,” said Kaye Wellings, Ph.D., the study’s senior author and a celebrated professor of sexual and reproductive health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, in a statement.

Keeping up to date on what the teens are up to isn’t just important for Mindy Kaling and other Hollywood tastemakers. New sex habits come with new health risks, and it’s the job of public health officials to keep people informed on how to explore all of their opportunities without harming themselves.

“It is important to keep up to date with trends in sexual lifestyles to help young people safeguard their health and increase their well being,” says Wellings.

Photos via Flickr / Chill Mimi, Flickr / A_Peach (offline until Xmas)

Photos via Flickr / Chill Mimi, Flickr / A_Peach (offline until Xmas)

Written by Yasmin Tayag

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