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Together We Can Create Change
Unfortunately, we live in a culture that both embraces and rejects issues surrounding sex and sexuality. These mixed messages make it particularly difficult for parents and other caregivers to discuss sexual matters at home. Since we are constantly bombarded with mixed messages, social pressures may conflict with family values creating a big problem when it comes to sexual education at home.
Thinking back on my own childhood I learned about sexual matters from my friends, and I might add most of the information was grossly incorrect. How about you?
How well did or does your family prepare you for sexual issues in your life? Did or do you ask them questions?
While most parents and caregivers want to talk to their children about sex many are unsure about how to confront the subject.
That's where we step in. Knowledge is power!
As a leading provider of education and health care in our community,Planned Parenthood knows firsthand the power of education to help teens make responsible decisions about their health. Every year, Planned Parenthood affiliates throughout Florida provide more than 100,000 women, men and teens with the health information and services they need to protect their health. Planned Parenthood reaches more than half a million adults and teens across the state through programs such as:
Healthy,Empowered and Real Teens!- In Orlando CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO!
Mother-Daughter's workshop for mothers and their 9-12 year old daughters- In Collier County
CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO!
SOURCE Teen Theatre-IN Southwest & Central FL CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO!
Teen Time®- In the Miami area
CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO!
FACES- In Northeast FL
CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO!
Daddy's Little Girl- In Palm Beach & Broward Counties
CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO!
A new resource guide titled "The Big Talk: Sex Ed at Home," is also available at all county libraries. In Gainesville, the brochure is available at Barnes & Noble, Goerings, and Omni bookstores.
At Planned Parenthood prevention is our goal everyday!
For online resources family members can go HERE where they can find tips and more information about sex education at home.
- Voxy Lady's blog
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Manatee County Crisis
After reading about the crisis Manatee County is facing in regards to teen pregnancy one thing was evident; the county's approach to abstinence only sexual education is failing miserably. Here are the sobering facts:
Manatee County has one of the highest teen pregnancy rates in the state.
Out of 67 counties, Manatee is the 17th highest; and, in births to teens 10 to 14 years of age, Manatee has the 13th highest rate.
In 2006, one-third of 2,196 ninth-graders surveyed admitted that they had sexual intercourse. This was a 3 percent increase over the 2004 results.
Of the ninth-graders surveyed, one out of 10 acknowledged having had sex with four or more partners.
Manatee County has the 12th highest rate of newly-diagnosed HIV cases and the 12th highest rate of pediatric AIDS cases.
After reading these startling statistics I am sure you will ask yourself how much longer we can tolerate a sexual education program that does not educate our teens on how to protect themselves. The current sexual education program in Manatee County does not teach our teens how to avoid pregnancy, or how to protect themselves from sexually transmitted diseases such as HPV, chlamydia and HIV/AIDS.
Manatee County is facing devastating problems. Many Manatee residents and Planned Parenthood of Southwest Florida have supported the concept of a Planned Parenthood in Manatee County that would be focused solely on education and prevention. Planned Parenthood's first message to teens is abstinence and, indeed, tells teens that abstinence is the only foolproof method of prevention. However, the fact is that many teens will continue to be sexually active, Planned Parenthood includes important, life-saving lessons for young people and their families on how to prevent unwanted pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.
Besides providing this comprehensive, age-appropriate educational curriculum, Planned Parenthood will also be offering all women in Manatee County the opportunity for gynecological exams, cancer screenings, pregnancy testing and counseling (including adoption referral); and testing and treatment for sexually-transmitted infections, including testing for HIV/AIDS.
Planned Parenthood of Southwest and Central Florida announced plans in March to start a limited clinic in Manatee County by the summer of 2008. The location has not yet been decided. The mission of the Bradenton clinic, will be to offer birth control, pregnancy testing, counseling, and STD and HIV testing.
- Voxy Lady's blog
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Teens Need Responsible, Medically Accurate Sex Education
There is still time to make your voice heard and support Florida teens getting the information they need to make healthy decisions - including medically-accurate, age-appropriate, comprehensive sex education.TAKE ACTION NOW! to tell your legislators to support policies that provide our youth with the comprehensive sex education they need to protect themselves and make responsible choices.
On November 5th, the University of Florida released a study confirming what we already knew - that the state of sex education in Florida is failing our youth. The very next day, a national report, Emerging Answers 2007, was released by Douglas Kirby, Ph.D., and the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy. The report showed that abstinence-only programs are ineffective, and includes strong evidence that abstinence-only programs do not have any impact on teen sexual behavior.
However, last year, Florida received $10,700,147 in federal funding for abstinence-only-until-marriage programs. Florida is not only the the second largest recipient of federal abstinence-only funds in the nation, but also has the 6th highest rate of teen pregnancy and the 2nd highest rate of annual HIV transmission in the country.
Parents and teachers, working together, know best how to teach the difficult subjects of sex and life skills. But too many schools cater to a narrow minority by allowing abstinence-only programs to censor teachers and exclude parents input.
Teens need and deserve responsible sex education that includes information about abstinence, AND about protection from diseases and pregnancy.
THERE'S STILL TIME Sign the petition telling your legislators that the time has come for statewide standards so all teens learn the facts about sex from trusted and responsible sources.CLICK HERE to sign the petition today
- Voxy Lady's blog
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Male Sexual Health
As the saying goes, it's a man's world — except, perhaps, when it comes to reproductive and sexual health. There, by and large, women's reproductive health issues reign — just think of the TV ads for the new cervical cancer vaccine, or the pink ribbons for breast cancer research.
According to a recent study from the Guttmacher Institute, up to 52 percent of men have gone without any reproductive or sexual health services in the past year — and those that didn't often met with care that was either inadequate or not comprehensive. That's a lot of unmet need — HIV and other tests for sexually transmitted infections not taken, prostate and/or testicular exams not performed, and open, honest dialogue about serious reproductive and sexual health matters, such as birth control, left unspoken.
Men’s reproductive and sexual health needs may change over the course of their lives. With adequate, accurate information and skills, men can protect their health and well-being. CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THIS IMPORTANT TOPIC!
- Voxy Lady's blog
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230+ Reasons To Use Birth Control
There are 237 reasons to have sex — and having a child is number 27. That's what researchers from the University of Texas at Austin found. They surveyed 2,000 women and men about their motivations for having sex; this ample (though not exhaustive) list, published in the August issue of Archives of Sexual Behavior, is the result.
From a Planned Parenthood point of view, that's 230-plus reasons to use birth control. Whether you were simply "in the heat of the moment" (1), "tired of being a virgin" (31), or thinking sex might help you fall asleep (108), or because you wanted to "burn calories" (176), if you choose to have intercourse, correct and consistent use of birth control is the best way to avoid an unintended pregnancy. Given the wide range of motivations for having sex, and so few aimed at conception, the availability of good, affordable, and reliable birth control is vital. Remember, in the United States, nearly half of all pregnancies are unplanned.
Every year, 85 percent of women aged 15–44 who don’t use birth control during vaginal intercourse become pregnant. Although the only guarantee against unintended pregnancy is to not have sex, using birth control can reduce your risk of pregnancy from vaginal intercourse. For more information abut birth control methods CLICK HERE!
In the mean time, while the New York Times' John Tierney is on the lookout for reason number 238, the researchers are working on another list — reasons why people don't have sex. Stay tuned.
- Voxy Lady's blog
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