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Canadian Teens Say Parents, Not Sex-Ed,
is Best for Info on Healthy Sexuality
By Gudrun Schultz
MONTREAL, Quebec, February 22, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com)
- Canadian teenagers view parents as
their primary source for information on
sex and healthy sexuality, a new Ipsos-Reid
poll reveals.
In a survey jointly conducted by the
Canadian Association for Adolescent
Health (CAAH) and Ipsos on the sexual
behavior and knowledge of teenagers,
researchers were startled to discover
that a majority of teenagers identified
their parents as the most valuable
resource for information on sex.
“One of the most surprising results of
the study was how parents underestimate
their importance and the role teens
expect them to play when it comes to
their sexuality and sexual health,” said
Dr. Miriam Kaufman, a CAAH spokesperson
and paediatrician at the Adolescent
Division at the Hospital for Sick
Children in Toronto, in a press release
yesterday.
“Canadian teens look up to their parents
and consider them a valuable source of
information. We are hoping that by
making this information widely known,
parents will feel more comfortable
breaking the wall of silence that too
often exists when it comes to discussing
sexuality with their children.”
Parents were identified as a major
source of sex information by 63 percent
of teenagers polled. Almost half (43
percent) said parents were the most
useful and valuable source of
information.
However, 38 percent of teens said they
have not discussed sex and sexuality
with their mothers.
Sex education in schools received a very
low rating by teenagers—only 23 percent
said they found it to be useful.
The survey also revealed an alarming
lack of accurate information on
sexuality among teenagers. Confusion
over what constitutes sexual activity
and the health hazards associated with
certain sexual practices were marked
among those polled, with 26 percent of
teens defining abstinence as compatible
with oral sex.
The poll, completed in October 2005, was
conducted among 1,171 teenagers between
the ages of 14 and 17. The survey also
incorporated information from interviews
with 1,139 mothers of teenagers between
the ages of 14 and 17. All interviews
were conducted online. The results are
considered accurate to within 2.9
percentage points, plus or minus, 19
times out of 20.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Gudrun Schultz is a reporter for
Life Site News. This article
copyright Life Site News
www.lifesitenews.com.
Permission to republish is granted.
This article originally published
Tuesday February 22, 2006
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