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Teen Sex & Pregnancy
How many teen girls in the U.S. get
pregnant each year?
Nearly one million teen girls get pregnant each year. Nearly four out of
10 young women get pregnant at least once before they turn 20.1
Each year the federal government alone spends about $40 billion to help
families that began with a teenage birth.2
- The
National Campaign To Prevent Teen Pregnancy.
Statistics By Topic:
Sexual Activity
Contraceptive Use
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Teen Pregnancy
Child Bearing
Teen Mothers & Their Children
Abortion
Statistics quoted from:
The
Alan Guttmacher Institute: Teen Sex and Pregnancy 1999 Summary
from the CDC:
- The United States
has the highest teenage pregnancy rate of all developed countries.
- About 1 million
teenagers become pregnant each year; 95% of those pregnancies are
unintended, and
almost one third end in abortions.
- Public costs from
teenage childbearing totaled $120 billion from 1985–1990; $48
billion could
have been saved if each birth had been postponed until the mother
was at least 20
years old.
- Birth rates during
1991–1996 declined for teenagers in all racial and ethnic groups.
- Birth rates among
teenagers vary substantially from state to state; some states have
rates almost
three times higher than those of the states with the lowest rates.
- 13 community
partnerships in 11 states are implementing comprehensive, integrated
youth programs
to prevent teenage pregnancies and related problems.
- 8 nongovernmental
organizations are supported to assist states to develop and
implement strategies
to prevent pregnancy among teenagers.
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.
- The likelihood of teenagers' having
intercourse increases steadily with age; however, about 1 in 5 young
people do not have intercourse while teenagers.
- Most young people begin having sex
in their mid-to-late teens, about 8 years before they marry; more
than half of 17-year-olds have had intercourse.
- While 93% of teenage women report
that their first intercourse was voluntary, one-quarter of these
young women report that it was unwanted.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
CONTRACEPTIVE
USE
- A sexually active teenager who does
not use contraceptives has a 90% chance of becoming pregnant within
one year.
- Teenage women's contraceptive use at
first intercourse rose from 48% to 65% during the 1980s, almost
entirely because of a doubling in condom use. By 1995, use at first
intercourse reached 78%, with 2/3 of it condom use.
- 9 in 10 sexually active women and
their partners use a contraceptive method, although not always
consistently or correctly.
- About 1 in 6 teenage women
practicing contraception combine two methods, primarily the condom
and another method.
- The method teenage women most
frequently use is the pill (44%), followed by the condom (38%).
About 10% rely on the injectable, 4% on withdrawal and 3% on the
implant.
- Teenagers are less likely than older
women to practice contraception without interruption over the course
of a year, and more likely to practice contraception sporadically or
not at all.
SEXUALLY
TRANSMITTED DISEASES (STDs)
- Every year 3 million teens--about 1
in 4 sexually experienced teens--acquire an STD.
- In a single act of unprotected sex
with an infected partner, a teenage woman has a 1% risk of acquiring
HIV, a 30% risk of getting genital herpes and a 50% chance of
contracting gonorrhea.
- Chlamydia is more common among teens
than among older men and women; in some settings, 10-29% of sexually
active teenage women and 10% of teenage men tested for STDs have
been found to have chlamydia.
- Teens have higher rates of gonorrhea
than do sexually active men and women aged 20-44.
- In some studies, up to 15% of
sexually active teenage women have been found to be infected with
the human papillomavirus, many with a strain of the virus linked to
cervical cancer.
- Teenage women have a higher
hospitalization rate than older women for acute pelvic inflammatory
disease (PID), which is most often caused by untreated gonorrhea or
chlamydia. PID can lead to infertility and ectopic pregnancy.
TEEN
PREGNANCY
- Each year, almost 1 million teenage
women--10% of all women aged 15-19 and 19% of those who have had
sexual intercourse--become pregnant.
- The overall U.S. teenage pregnancy
rate declined 17% between 1990 and 1996, from 117 pregnancies per
1,000 women aged 15-19 to 97 per 1,000.
- 78% of teen pregnancies are
unplanned, accounting for about 1/4 of all accidental pregnancies
annually.
- 6 in 10 teen pregnancies occur among
18-19 year-olds.
- Teen pregnancy rates are much higher
in the United States than in many other developed countries--twice
as high as in England and Wales or Canada, and nine times as high as
in the Netherlands or Japan.
- Steep decreases in the pregnancy
rate among sexually experienced teenagers accounted for most of the
drop in the overall teenage pregnancy rate in the early-to-mid
1990s. While 20% of the decline is because of decreased sexual
activity, 80% is due to more effective contraceptive practice.
CHILDBEARING
- 13% of all U.S. births are to teens.
- The fathers of babies born to
teenage mothers are likely to be older than the women: About 1 in 5
infants born to unmarried minors are fathered by men 5 or more years
older than the mother.
- 78% of births to teens occur outside
of marriage.
- Teens now account for 31% of all
nonmarital births, down from 50% in 1970.
- 1/4 of teenage mothers have a second
child within 2 years of their first.
TEEN
MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN
- Teens who give birth are much more
likely to come from poor or low-income families (83%) than are teens
who have abortions (61%) or teens in general (38%).
- 7 in 10 teen mothers complete high
school, but they are less likely than women who delay childbearing
to go on to college.
- In part because most teen mothers
come from disadvantaged backgrounds, 28% of them are poor while in
their 20s and early 30s; only 7% of women who first give birth after
adolescence are poor at those ages.
- 1/3 of pregnant teens receive
inadequate prenatal care; babies born to young mothers are more
likely to be low-birth-weight, to have childhood health problems and
to be hospitalized than are those born to older mothers.
ABORTION
- Nearly 4 in 10 teen pregnancies
(excluding those ending in miscarriages) are terminated by abortion.
There were about 274,000 abortions among teens in 1996.
- Since 1980, abortion rates among
sexually experienced teens have declined steadily, because fewer
teens are becoming pregnant, and in recent years, fewer pregnant
teens have chosen to have an abortion.
- The reasons most often given by
teens for choosing to have an abortion are being concerned about how
having a baby would change their lives, feeling that they are not
mature enough to have a child and having financial problems.
- 29 states currently have mandatory
parental involvement laws in effect for a minor seeking an abortion:
AL, AR, DE, GA, ID, IN, IO, KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NE,
NC, ND, OH, PA, RI, SC, SD, UT, VA, WV, WI and WY.
- 61% of minors who have abortions do
so with at least one parent's knowledge; 45% of parents are told by
their daughter. The great majority of parents support their
daughter's decision to have an abortion.
Sources
The data in this fact sheet are the most
current available. Most of the data are from research conducted by
The Alan Guttmacher Institute (AGI) or published in the
peer-reviewed journal Family Planning Perspectives and the
1994 AGI report Sex and America's Teenagers. Additional
sources include the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
the National Center for Health Statistics.
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