Good News in New York

Teens at thirteen New York City high schools have had access to emergency contraception for over a year–but it wasn’t news until the New York Post got wind of it in an “exclusive” report on Sunday. In other words, the program did not make any of its critics’ wildest fears come true. No crazy rise in teenage sexual shenanigans. No rash of teens stricken with any of Plan B‘s side effects, real or imagined. The Post and fair-weather parental advocates like Cardinal Timothy Dolan would never have passed up the opportunity to fan even the slightest concern into a full-blown controversy.

Now the belated hand wringing has begun, and as long as the schools keep following the state law that allows doctors to prescribe emergency contraception pills to women fourteen or older without parental consent–yes, once again, New York state is ahead of the curve–I don’t mind in the least.

Okay, maybe I do mind, but I can also hope that the special provision included to protect parental rights (how I want to put quotations around that phrase), will force the parents who are really only fighting for the right not to think about teenage sexuality at all, to consider the possibility that their child may have the same feelings that have been making adolescents infamous for ages, even if only for the moment it takes them to ”opt-out” of the program. Best case scenario, it starts an honest dialogue between parent and child. Worst case scenario, at least the child knows where his or her parent stands, if and when the poor kid needs to talk to a grown-up.

Elsewhere in New York state, the news in teenage reproductive health hasn’t been good. A recent investigation by the NYCLU revealed “glaring inaccuracies about basic anatomy, reinforced negative gender stereotypes, and stigmatized LGBT students and families” in Sex Ed classes statewide. In one district, the ignorance reaches Todd Akin proportions: definition of vagina–”a sperm deposit.” No word on whether it shuts down or not. (Maybe it has bankers’ hours? Get it?)

I have every sympathy in the world for parents, and the argument about school nurses needing a parent’s permission to dispense Tylenol is at least as old as I am. But I’m still pretty sure teenage girls don’t use Tylenol (or aspirin, anywhere) to prevent pregnancy. (“Not now, I have a headache,” comes much later.) Maybe today’s parents are less hung-up about sex than my parents were back in the day. It wouldn’t take much. But I have a hard time believing even the coolest parents in the world have figured out how to make their children believe they’re always “easy to talk to” about sex. (I’d be impressed and probably a little creeped out, but I wouldn’t believe.) I’m too uptight to say I think the taboos we have about sex are a good thing; but I do think they’ve survived thousands of years because they’re powerful. If loosey goosey New Yorkers with all their culturally elite street cred can still get tongue-tied–or willfully blind–about teens and sex, I, for one, am glad city teens have professional health care providers looking out for them while their parents work out their feelings.

 

Sex in the City

Sex is all over the news up here in New York City, and not just because the newly-wedded Kardashian is divorcing. Between the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices’ recent recommendation that 11- and 12-year-old boys be vaccinated against the Human Papalloma Virus (HPV) and the reaction to the city’s mandatory sex ed program set to begin this spring, even a reasonably polite, mild-mannered adult like myself can be forgiven for thinking about the sex lives of strangers. Even if they’re underage strangers. Hopefully.

Not for the first time, I’m wondering how people manage to do the whole parenting thing. As a licensed therapist once told me, cultures have taboos for a reason. And let’s face it, how many taboos do we have left besides those having to do with S-E-X? I have serious doubts as to how many adults can really have an adult conversation about sex with other adults. So, to put it mildly, I do not envy anyone having to have “the talk” with their kids. But part of parenting—and part of being an adult in a mostly-functioning society—is to put the well-being of the most vulnerable above our own feelings, icky as they may be. [Read more...]

Vatican Family Values

As my people like to say, there is chutzpah, and then there is chutzpah. And if you are Michele Bachmann there is even chitzpah. 

But this needs a bigger word. Probably in Italian. With an issimo on the end.

Don’t get me wrong. I like my Vatican predictable. So I wasn’t surprised when the Catholic Church came out to condemn the new mandatory sex ed classes in New York City. That’s what the Church does. Like the sun rises each morning and sets each night, the Church condemns.

Likewise, I’m not surprised that the Church didn’t pass up the opportunity to kick the condemnation up a notch. New York is only the biggest city in the world. Why not needle “the State” and “public institutions in the West” for their “magical trust in the effectiveness of sex education?” [Read more...]

Sex Ed is New in New York?

I like to think I’m the kind of New Yorker Michele Bachmann sees when she closes her eyes and dreams presidentially. So when I heard that New York City was requiring public schools to teach sex-education classes to students from sixth grade through high school, the news to me was that it was news. This is the city that never sleeps, after all. We were talking secession long before Rick Perry made it fashionable, and we have the “Don’t Blame Me, I Voted for Kerry” buttons to show for it.

My boiling blood returned to room temperature when I learned the majority of public school students in the city had been receiving sex education for years. The real news was that the city was  hoping to exert more influence over the curriculum by making the classes compulsory. To a New Yorker like me, that’s a no-brainer. In the absence of such content controls, students could attend a high school where they could (literally) get their hands on a condom without ever learning how—or why—to use one. (High schools in New York have been distributing condoms for over 20 years.)

I’m going to go out on a limb and suggest that most every American teen that’s seen a condom application demonstration up close and personal has wished sex educators might find a better less mortifying way. But let’s face it, beyond the very practical life-saving purpose the demo serves, there may be no better visual to convey one of the less popular facts of life: sex can be very unsexy.  And not just because you may have to wrestle with an unruly condom. [Read more...]

Teenagers, Birth Control, and the Eternal Wisdom of Donna Martin

Yesterday, the New York Times ran an article examining the city’s high abortion rate: 41 percent of all pregnancies in New York City end in abortion. Several possible explanations were mentioned, including the absence of mandatory sex education in the city’s public schools and young people’s lack of knowledge about where to get affordable birth control.

The focus on teenagers was interesting, particularly in light of an overall decrease in the number of teenage parents. In New York, the number of teenagers having children has fallen by almost 40 percent since 1996; the number of abortions has decreased by more than 16 percent. These statistics reflect national trends; according to the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, the teen birth rate declined by 6% in 2009 and is now at a “record low.” [Read more...]

Sex Ed and Politics: Malleable Moral Beliefs Should Not Policy Make

I can respect a person who thinks that abortion is wrong and should be illegal; I may disagree, but I can respect theposition.  My respect wanes when the same person or people or political party, are also against policies that would help reduce the abortion rate. Making abortion illegal will not make it desist.  In truth what illegalizing abortion does is make the process riskier for women and more profitable for those willing to operate outside the law, and it will not significantly change the rate of occurrence.
[Read more...]

Friday News Roundup

We made it to Friday, ya’ll! YEAH! Here are some hawt links to get you through the morning.

Federal Judge Rules that DOMA is Unconstitutional – Gay Politics
Are IUD’s Appropriate for Teens? – Financial Post
Should Birth Control Be Free? – Salon
Sex Ed on TV? – The Guardian

Monday Morning Round Up

Happy Monday, everybody! Here’s a few quick links to get your week started:

Oklahoma Governor Vetoes Another Anti-Abortion Bill – Center for Reproductive Rights
That’s Some Morality You’ve Got There – Feministe
Effective Sex Ed: Evidence-Based & Age Appropriate – Raising Women’s Voices
Malawi Couple Identify As a Man and a Trans Woman – Gay Politics
Words of Thanks to Dr. Tiller – Words of Choice

Not Your Mom’s Sex Ed

sex_edHoly masturbation, Batman! I wish I had taken sex ed in Spain, because Spanish teens are being taught how to masturbate as part of a new sex-positive sex ed campaign. According to Time Magazine:

In late October, the regional government of Extremadura in southwestern Spain launched a new sexual-education campaign designed to facilitate the “development of healthy habits, self-esteem and safety.” Although the publicly funded campaign includes the publication of pamphlets and an online magazine, the highlight is a series of workshops for 14-to-17-year-olds aimed at educating participants on anatomy, body image, safe-sex practices, gender equality and, in the mildly celebratory words of an early press release (since redacted), “sexual self-exploration and erotic self-knowledge.” Or, in other words, masturbation.

I feel like I got jipped. My sex ed class consisted of a film that told girls about their periods by showing a school nurse make pancakes in the shape of a uterus. I kid you not. After the film, we got free samples of tampons. I think I may have had one more day of sex ed that consisted of a list of STD symptoms. If someone had told me that masturbation was the key to positive self-esteem, I think high school would have been a lot more fun! [Read more...]

Thursday News Roundup

mouse_click_270x270HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius Denied Communion Because of Stance on Abortion – Washington Post
Sexual Assault Prevention Tips Guaranteed to Work – No, Not You
Hertz to Plead Not Guilty to Threatening Dr. Warren Hern – Denver Post
Policies to Curb Latina Pregnancies Have Failed – RH Reality Check
Personhood Amendment Could Outlaw Birth Control – Miami New Times
Exploring Global Attitudes Towards Sex Education – BBC