Mayor suggests combating high teen pregnancy rates
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Mayor Linda Dixon on Thursday said she would like to see
city-run sexual education classes to combat the city’s “dreadfully high”
teen birth rates.
Dixon said she hopes to coordinate with the Costa Mesa recreation
department to offer family-based informational classes about responsible
sexual activity, such as the consequences of sexual intercourse,
abstinence, birth control and sexually transmitted disease, to name a
few.
“I would like to see [classes] in the recreation department that teach
parents to communicate with teens about sex and teens to communicate with
their parents,” Dixon told about 20 people at a Planned Parenthood
conference held Thursday.
The idea is in the early stages. So preliminary, in fact, Dixon had
just thought of it during the conference that announced the results of a
Latino Teen Sex Survey by Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino
Counties.
The Latino Teen Sex Survey, conducted by Cal State Fullerton Market
Research Associates, explored family planning perceptions and practices
and found that Orange County Latino teens experience a higher frequency
of sexual intercourse and a lower level of birth control use than the
national average.
Study results are especially relevant in Costa Mesa, which the 2000
census found to be nearly 32% Latino, particularly its Westside, where
44% of the residents are Latino, according to a 1997 survey.
A recent study by the California Department of Health found the 92627
ZIP Code to have 91 teen mothers per 1,000 teenage girls, which is more
than double the county average of 42.
Officials who conducted the Latino Sex Survey -- which interviewed 448
Latino teens ages 13 to 19 -- cited a lack of education, communication
and certain cultural barriers as reasons for higher percentages in sexual
activity and teen pregnancy.
Jon Dunn, the president and chief executive of Planned Parenthood
Orange and San Bernardino Counties, said 34.2% of Latino teens said their
parents would be upset if they were caught with condoms or birth control
pills.
Latino parents are typically strict disciplinarians, and teenagers may
be afraid to approach them about sex. To combat fear, people must
encourage open dialogue, Dunn said.
Dunn also noted that Latinas anecdotally have fewer abortions than
girls in the general population, but he could not bolster that opinion
with figures because abortion statistics are not easily tabulated.
Planned Parenthood officials said it is critical to focus sex
education programs on Latino teens because the teen population will
increase by 52% over the next 10 years, and in that same time frame the
Latino demographic will become the largest in Orange County, studies
predict.
“Rises in the teen pregnancy rate could increase if we don’t reach
Latino youth,” Dunn said. “They are a growing population and a sexually
active population. We need to effectively reach out to them.”
Although Thursday’s conference centered on Latino youth, Dixon’s
comments on sex education were universal. She cited reports that show
that teen mothers are less likely to graduate, more likely to live in
poverty or on welfare, and more likely to neglect or abuse their
children.
“We all need to be aware of these alarming facts,” Dixon said. “It’s
not good for anyone.”
FYI
A Planned Parenthood study on family planning perceptions and
practices for Latino teens in Orange County found the following results.
National statistics are from reports conducted by the Alan Guttmacher
Institute.
* 67% of Orange County Latino teens have had sex, as compared with the
national average of 52% in the general population;
* 44% of Latino males report first sexual intercourse by age 14, as
compared with the national average of 30% of males in the general
population;
* 35% of Latinas report first sexual intercourse by age 15, as
compared with the national average of 20% of females in the general
population;
* 48% of Latino teens used a condom every time they had sex, as
compared with the national average of 67% in the general population.
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