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Name Lips
03-12-2008, 10:10 AM
Link (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23574940/)


1 in 4 teen girls has sexually transmitted disease
Virus that causes cervical cancer most common, government study finds

CHICAGO - Startling government research on teenage girls and sexually transmitted diseases sends a blunt message to kids who think they’re immune: It’s liable to happen to you or someone you know.

In the first study of its kind, researchers at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found at least one in 4 teenage American girls has a sexually transmitted disease.

The most common one is a virus that can cause cervical cancer, and the second most common can cause infertility. Nearly half the black teens in the study had at least one sexually transmitted infection, versus 20 percent among both whites and Mexican-American teens.

The study, released Tuesday at an STD prevention conference, has adolescent-health specialists pointing to possible reasons and offering potential solutions.

Blame is most often placed on inadequate sex education, from parents and from schools focusing too much on abstinence-only programs. Add to that a young person’s sense of being invulnerable.

“This is pretty shocking,” said Dr. Elizabeth Alderman, an adolescent medicine specialist at Montefiore Medical Center’s Children’s Hospital in New York.

“To talk about abstinence is not a bad thing,” but teen girls — and boys too — need to be informed about how to protect themselves if they do have sex, Alderman said.

Only about half of the girls in the study acknowledged having sex. Some teens define sex as only intercourse, yet other types of intimate behavior including oral sex can spread some diseases.

Among those who admitted having sex, the rate was even more disturbing — 40 percent had an STD.

“Those numbers are certainly alarming,” said sex education expert Nora Gelperin, who works with a teen-written Web site called sexetc.org.

“Sexuality is still a very taboo subject in our society,” she said. “Teens tell us that they can’t make decisions in the dark and that adults aren’t properly preparing them to make responsible decisions.”

Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said the study shows that “the national policy of promoting abstinence-only programs is a $1.5 billion failure, and teenage girls are paying the real price.”

Similar claims were made last year when the government announced the teen birth rate rose between 2005 and 2006, the first increase in 15 years.

The overall STD rate among the 838 girls in the study was 26 percent, which translates to more than 3 million girls nationwide, the CDC said.

HPV most common
The study by CDC researcher Dr. Sara Forhan is an analysis of nationally representative data on 838 girls aged 14 to 19 who took part in a 2003-04 government health survey. Teens were tested for four infections: human papillomavirus, or HPV, which can cause cervical cancer and affected 18 percent of girls studied; chlamydia, which affected 4 percent; trichomoniasis, 2.5 percent; and genital herpes, 2 percent.

Dr. John Douglas, director of the CDC’s division of STD prevention, said the results are the first to examine the combined national prevalence of common sexually transmitted diseases among adolescent girls. He said the data likely reflect current prevalence rates.

HPV can cause genital warts but often has no symptoms. A vaccine targeting several HPV strains recently became available, but Douglas said it likely has not yet had much impact on HPV prevalence rates in teen girls.

Chlamydia can cause an abnormal discharge and painful urination, but often has no symptoms. Signs of trichomoniasis are similar, and both diseases can be treated with antibiotics. Genital herpes can cause blisters but also is often symptomless. It can’t be cured but medicine can help.

The CDC recommends annual chlamydia screening for all sexually active women under age 25. It also recommends the three-dose HPV vaccine for girls aged 11-12 years, and catch-up shots for females aged 13 to 26.

The CDC’s Dr. Kevin Fenton said that given the potential complications from STDs, “screening, vaccination and other prevention strategies for sexually active women are among our highest public health priorities.”

Douglas said screening tests are underused in part because many teens don’t think they’re at risk, but also, some doctors mistakenly think: “Sexually transmitted diseases don’t happen to the kinds of patients I see.”

Teens need to hear the dual message that STDs can be prevented by abstinence and condoms — and hear them often, said Dr. Ellen Kruger, an obstetrician-gynecologist at Ochsner Medical Center in New Orleans.

“You’ve got to hammer at them,” with appropriate information at each stage of teen development to make sure it sinks in, she said.

She said there are a lot of myths out there, too — many sexually active teens think the withdrawal method will protect them, or that douching with Coca-Cola will kill STD germs.

Dr. Margaret Blythe, an adolescent medicine specialist at Indiana University School of Medicine, said some doctors hesitate to discuss STDs with teen patients or offer screening because of confidentiality concerns, knowing parents would have to be told of the results.

Blythe, who heads an American Academy of Pediatrics committee on adolescence, noted that the academy supports confidential teen screening.

I can't believe they waste perfectly good coca-cola... :mad:

Anyway, my only issue with this article is the continued emphasis on HPV. It's commonly being referred to as "the virus that causes cervical cancer" when it only causes one kind of cervical cancer, and it only causes that in a tiny minority of those it infects. Huge numbers of women are infected with it, the majority of the population in fact, and the incredibly vast majority of those will never know it. But it IS an STD so it does technically belong on the list, it's just all the other STDs they checked for are in a totally different league.

I also think this is one of the hugest warning signs against abstinence-only sex ed. Kids genuinely come out of programs like that thinking that since condoms and other birth control fail so often anyway (birth control failure rates are the ONLY mention of birth control in abstinence-only education), why bother using them at all? It should be called "ignorance-only" education. Human sexuality is part of every single one of us, and every single one of us deserves complete and unedited information on how our bodies work, how pregnancy occurs and develops, how STDs are passed, the different types of human sexual relationships, and so on. It should be a place where raw information is presented, and no moralizing, preaching, or behaviorism. Its purpose isn't to control teenage sex, but to empower teens with the ability to make educated, informed decisions about their own body and sexuality.

I guess that's just something the conservative crowd can't stomach. The ONLY way they want to mention sex to teens is in a way that is to prevent what they see as the "undesirable behaviors."

Varaj
03-12-2008, 10:27 AM
Considering that 50%-75% of all Americans will get a "STD" version of HPV at some point, throwing HPV into the mix really messes the numbers up.
It would be interesting to see the numbers broken down by infection type.

That being said they are some horrible numbers and I'm pretty inclined to believe it has much to do with sex education in the US.

http://cectic.com/comics/091.png

Name Lips
03-12-2008, 10:43 AM
Well, it broke them down a bit:


HPV, which can cause cervical cancer and affected 18 percent of girls studied; chlamydia, which affected 4 percent; trichomoniasis, 2.5 percent; and genital herpes, 2 percent.

I can't tell if the 1 in 4 figure just adds them all together (a mistake lots of reporters would make) or if it accurately represents those teens that have more than one infection.

The Winslow
03-12-2008, 10:52 AM
perfectly good coca-cola
Error: does not compute

Singularity
03-12-2008, 11:27 AM
They might as well have just said that one in four teenage girls is sexually active. And who are they being sexually active with? Usually teenage boys. OMG teens are having sex! It's a national epidemic!

doc
03-12-2008, 03:40 PM
Notice that the study was only with 838 girls in my opioon thats to small a study group to claim 1 in 4 American teenage girls has a STD. Was the study conducted in a large urban area(inner city) exclusivly or was the surburbs included, how about small town america ? Now if it was 83,800 girls from across the country I'ld be outraged as is I'm wondering who wants a grant. But then that's my opinion and I'm a sexest pig.

Pigs in Space
03-12-2008, 05:28 PM
Error: does not compute

Douching with coco-cola is the most effective form of birth control known to man.

Singularity
03-12-2008, 05:31 PM
Notice that the study was only with 838 girls in my opioon thats to small a study group to claim 1 in 4 American teenage girls has a STD. Was the study conducted in a large urban area(inner city) exclusivly or was the surburbs included, how about small town america ? Now if it was 83,800 girls from across the country I'ld be outraged as is I'm wondering who wants a grant. But then that's my opinion and I'm a sexest pig.

I actually saw this on the news last night, and yes, a disproportionately large number of the girls studied were from the inner cities.

Radu
03-12-2008, 11:25 PM
My mom read that article in our paper here, and her reaction was kind of interesting.

"I can't believe they want to require vaccinations for all girls. If I was putting my kids through school now, I'd feel like a failure as a parent if I gave my kid that shot. It's like I'd be admitting I couldn't raise children who made good decisions, so I'm giving them this shot to cover for it."

She revised her opinion a bit when I countered with the argument that you could still teach your kids good values AND give them the vaccine. In a way, it's an added measure of protection for them--- do you want them to potentially pay for the rest of their life for what could be one youthful mistake? If your daughter had sex as a teen it wouldn't mean she was an awful person or you failed as a parent. Maybe it's a bad idea, but kids make bad decisions. If there was a way to keep this decision from affecting the rest of her life, wouldn't you want to consider it?

RE: Abstinence only education- I think the cartoon posted above said everything that needed to be said.

Schizm
03-13-2008, 10:43 AM
Aside from that, radu, isn't HPV one of the things you can catch from a toilet seat?

Varaj
03-13-2008, 10:50 AM
Aside from that, radu, isn't HPV one of the things you can catch from a toilet seat?

It is rare but HPV (the STD versions) can be caught from shaking hands, sharing beds, clothes, etc.

Singularity
03-13-2008, 07:30 PM
If you are alive and over the age of sixteen, chances are that you have HPV, whether you're aware you have it or not.

doc
03-14-2008, 03:21 PM
I actually saw this on the news last night, and yes, a disproportionately large number of the girls studied were from the inner cities.
Typical media scare tactic, it's like looking at the folks here and saying 99% are bleeding heart liberials..........wait bad example :)