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Teen Sex and Pregnancy Revised 9/1999 SEXUAL ACTIVITY • Most very young teens have not had intercourse: 8 in 10 girls and 7 in 10 boys are sexually inexperienced at age 15. 1
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Teen Sex and PregnancyRevised 9/1999 SEXUAL ACTIVITY • Most very young teens have not had intercourse: 8 in 10 girls and 7 in 10 boys are sexually inexperienced at age 15. 1 • While 93% of teenage women report that their first intercourse was voluntary, one-quarter of these young women report that it was unwanted.4 • The younger women are when they first have intercourse, the more likely they are to have had unwanted or nonvoluntary first sex--7 in 10 of those who had sex before age 13, for example.5 • Nearly two-thirds (64%) of sexually active 15-17-year-old women have partners who are within two years of their age; 29% have sexual partners who are 3-5 years older, and 7% have partners who are six or more years older.6 • Most sexually active young men have female partners close to their age: 76% of the partners of 19-year-old men are either 17 (33%) or 18 (43%); 13% are 16, and 11% are aged 13-15.7 TEEN PREGNANCY • 6 in 10 teen pregnancies occur among 18-19 year-olds.23 © copyright 2003, The Alan Guttmacher Institute. search
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Store Recursos en Español • Planned Parenthood Mission Products • About Our Products • What's New • Bestsellers • Birth Control • STIs • Abortion • Women's Health • For Parents • For Teens • En Español • Wearables with a Message • Campaigns & Programs • Clearance • Contact Us • How to Order • About Planned Parenthood • Quiénes Somos • La Misión de Planned Prenthood • Localizador de la Clinica • Servicios de Salud Extensos • Recursos de Salud • Publicaciones en Español • Planned Parenthood Condoms Teenagers who have been raped or abused also experience higher rates of pregnancy — in a sample of 500 teen mothers, two-thirds had histories of sexual and physical abuse, primarily by adult men averaging age 27 (Males, 1993). Among women younger than 18, the pregnancy rate among those with a partner who is six or more years older is 3.7 times as high as the rate among those whose partner is no more than two years older. Adolescent women with older partners also use contraception less frequently — one study found that 66 percent of those with a partner six or more years older had practiced contraception at last intercourse, compared with 78 percent of those with a partner within two years of their own age (Darroch et al., 1999). Poor and High-Risk Teens Need Programs Aimed at Preventing Pregnancy PPFA Web site © 1998 - 2003 Planned Parenthood® Federation of America, Inc.Use of this site signifies your agreement to our terms of use and privacy statement. Reducing Teenage Pregnancy
Commentary Vol. 280 No. 7, August 19, 1998 Adolescent Pregnancy and Sexual Abuse M. Joycelyn Elders, MD; Alexa E. Albert, BA JAMA. 1998;280:648-649. “Typically, the most pressing concern for teens and their cliniciansbecomes choosing from among the pregnancy outcome options, namely,abortion, parenting, or adoption….. In the commotion,clinicians may fail to inquire about precipitating events. Specifically,a workup to rule out sexual abuse may not be done, despite thefact that pregnancy in a young adolescent is an establishedsign of potential sexual abuse.3 “
Commentary Vol. 280 No. 7, August 19, 1998 Adolescent Pregnancy and Sexual Abuse M. Joycelyn Elders, MD; Alexa E. Albert, BA JAMA. 1998;280:648-649. “… [S]exual abuse is a common antecedentof adolescent pregnancy, with up to 66% of pregnant teens reportinghistories of abuse.4-7” “Pregnancy may also be a sign of ongoing sexual abuse; that is,the pregnancy may result directly from an episode of abuse.Boyer and Fine4 found that of 535 young women who were pregnant,44% had been raped, of whom 11% became pregnant as a resultof the rape. One half of these young women with rape historieswere raped more than once.”
Commentary Vol. 280 No. 7, August 19, 1998 Adolescent Pregnancy and Sexual Abuse M. Joycelyn Elders, MD; Alexa E. Albert, BA JAMA. 1998;280:648-649. “The incidence of nonvoluntary sexual experiences that occurin adolescence, and thus, could lead to teen pregnancy, appearsgreater than previously assumed.” “Coercive sex acts against adolescent girls are frequently perpetratedby their boyfriends…. Boyfriends who are considerably older than their adolescentgirlfriends have been found to be responsible for a majorityof teen pregnancies.15-17”
Commentary Vol. 280 No. 7, August 19, 1998 Adolescent Pregnancy and Sexual Abuse M. Joycelyn Elders, MD; Alexa E. Albert, BA JAMA. 1998;280:648-649. “[H]ealth care professionals need to improve their abilities to identify and support adolescent girls who are experiencing nonvoluntary sex and are subsequently at risk for unplanned pregnancies.”