40pc US teens sexually active, prefer rhythm method of birth control: Study

New York, June 4 (ANI): Forty percent teen girls aged 15 to 19 say they”ve had sex at least once and prefer the rhythm method of birth control, according to new statistics.

The report also found that youngsters are casual about pregnancy, which researchers say may help explain why the teen pregnancy rate is no longer dropping, as it was earlier.

Overall, teenage use birth control methods and teen attitudes toward pregnancy have remained about the same since a similar survey was done in 2002.

There are some bright results too – more girls prefer the rhythm method— timing sex to avoid fertile days to prevent getting pregnant— probably along with another form of birth control. That”s up from 11 percent in 2002.

However, the rhythm method is only 75 per cent effective.

The survey results were based on face-to-face interviews with nearly 2,800 teens ages 15 through 19 at their homes in the years 2006 through 2008.

“We”ve known the decline in childbearing stalled out. This report kind of fills in the why,” The New York Daily News quoted Bill Albert, a spokesman for the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy. (ANI)

Raquel Welch feels the Pill has led to decline of institution of marriage

London, May 11 (ANI): Actress Raquel Welch, 69, believes the Pill has led to the decline of the institution of marriage, as it has made promiscuity easier.

The ‘One Million Years BC’ star said that things are so uncontrollable that “these days nobody seems able to keep it in their pants or honour a commitment”.

“The growing proliferation of birth control methods has had an awesome effect on both sexes and led to a sea change in moral values,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying in an article for CNN, marking the introduction of the Pill to the US market 50 years ago.

She added: “As I”ve grown older over the past five decades and lived through this revolutionary period in female sexuality, I”ve seen how it has altered American society for better or worse.”

Welch admitted that the Pill had “made it easier for a woman to choose to delay having children until after she established herself in a career.”

However, she suggested a “significant and enduring” effect on women was the idea that they could have sexual intercourse “without any consequences” with the result that fewer today saw marriage as “a viable option”.

Despite three failed marriages, she still believes marriage is the “cornerstone of civilisation, an essential institution that stabilises society, provides a sanctuary for children and saves us from anarchy”.

She ended: “Seriously folks, if an ageing sex symbol like me starts waving the red flag of caution over how low moral standards have plummeted, you know it”s gotta be pretty bad.” (ANI)