Sunday, December 26, 2010

Teens Giving Birth Significantly Reduced Despite Hollywood's Best Efforts




A National Center for Health Statistics report documents reduced teen pregnancies across all ethnic groups. However, experts can not cite the specific reasons fewer teens are having children of their own.

The National Center for Health Statistics report released this Tuesday says that the teen birth-rate fell to 39.1 births per 1,000 teenagers ages 15 to 19 in 2009. This is a 6% drop from 2008 and the lowest rate since 1940. Rates in 1990 were 61.8 per 1,000. Hispanics were the group that saw the greatest fall – by 10% but still stands at 70.1 births per 1,000.

There was more good news in the report about the birth weight of newborns and less of them being born premature. Does this mean pregnant women are getting better access to prenatal healthcare or just doing a better job of taking care of themselves?



While no one has yet made the argument that the Bush Administration's abstinence only education initiative contributed to less teens getting pregnant, it is only a matter of time if Fox News hasn't already. Sarah Palin, an abstinence only proponent, surprisingly has not been pushing this argument on Facebook or Twitter yet. Perhaps no one has thought of it for her or perhaps she is too preoccupied with attacking First Lady Michelle Obama over her imitative to push healthier food consumption on America's youth.

In related news, the Parents Television Council has released a new report accusing Hollywood producers of attempting to corrupt youth through television programs. In it's report "Sexualized Teen Girls Are Tinseltown's New Target", the PTC says......



When underage female characters appear on screen: more sexual content is depicted; the teen girls show next to no negative response to being sexualized; more sexual incidents occur outside of any form of a committed relationship; and there is less accuracy in the TV content rating.



The results from this report show Tinseltown’s eagerness to not only objectify and fetishize young girls, but to sexualize them in such a way that real teens are led to believe their sole value comes from their sexuality.

Join hosts R Lee Gordon and Scotty Reid as they discuss and analyze these two reports and what they means for today's teens. Parents and Teens are encouraged to call in and share their thoughts on these issues.

1 comment:

  1. Looking forward to our continuing to inform and uplift, good brother !

    ReplyDelete