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What Is Unprotected Sex

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Are you or do you know someone having Teenage Unprotected sex? Teenage pregnancy is pregnancy in females under the age of 20. A female can become pregnant from sexual intercourse after she has begun to ovulate which can be before her first menstrual period, but usually occurs after the onset of her periods.

Three out of teenage girls in the united states gets pregnant almost 50% of teens have never considered how a pregnancy would affect their lives parenthood is the led reason why teenage women drop out of school
Less than half of teen mothers ever graduate from high school fewer than 2% earn a college degree by the age 30 …show more content…

It's a setback that can affect the lives of the parents and the child for many years to come. For one thing, an early pregnancy can keep a woman -- and sometimes the father -- from getting a good education. As reported by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, only 40 percent of mothers who have children before the age of 18 ever complete high school. Unqualified for a good-paying job, the mothers have a very hard time making ends meet. Almost half of all teenage mothers go on welfare within five years.
The children of teenage mothers are also at a distinct disadvantage. According to the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, they are 50 percent more likely to repeat a grade and are also less likely to finish high school. The sons of teenage mothers are more likely than sons of older moms to do a stint in prison, and daughters are more likely to become teenage mothers …show more content…

Why males were ever excluded from the way we think about pregnancy prevention is puzzling," write the authors of the recent report Involving Males in Preventing Teen Pregnancy. "Sexual behavior involves two partners." Relegating fertility and family to the world of women, the authors write, "has kept us from acknowledging what should have been obvious -- that males must be involved in any policy solution to unintended pregnancies among teenagers."
The report continues that it is well known that adolescent boys initiate sex earlier than girls. But "contrary to stereotypes about males' disregard for contraception," the authors say, overwhelming evidence shows that for many years teenage boys have played a key role in providing contraception. In addition, this pattern has improved steadily over the last few decades. These shifts in behavior, the researchers conclude, suggests that pregnancy prevention efforts that include young men are crucial and "will not necessarily fall on deaf

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