Since 1991,
Nevertheless, the
Federal officials have long warned on the negative
consequences for teen parents and their children. To be more specific, teen
mothers are more likely to drop out school, remain unmarried and live in
poverty; children of teen parents are more likely to grow up poor, have a
single parent, experience abuse or neglect and end up in the child welfare
system; sons of teen mothers are more likely to end up in prison, while the daughters
are more likely to become teen parents themselves; eight of ten fathers do not marry
the mothers of their first children; teen fathers have lower education levels
and suffer earning losses of 10 to 15 percent annually.
May is Teen Pregnancy Prevention Month, a month designated to
raise awareness about teen pregnancy and the need for effective, comprehensive
teen pregnancy prevention programs. The message of this day is as clear as
possible: sex may often result in unwelcome consequences, especially in teens’
case who are not prepared for their sexual lives.
This message is on the front-page of any organization
focusing on preventing teen pregnancy, especially this month. Educations leaders,
businesses, groups representing elected officials, fatherhood and male
involvement groups, teen websites, health sector leaders, media, youth serving
groups, faith-based groups and other prominent national organizations joined
forces to teach teenagers how to prevent pregnancies.
Teens are being asked to go to the National Campaign to
Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy’s new teen web site, www.stayteen.org for
a short online quiz asking youths what they would do in under-pressure
situations, drinking and gossip. The quiz is destined to teens ages 13 and
older.
Sarah Brown, chief officer of the National Campaign to
Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy hopes the quiz will help teens (taking it)
to acknowledge the consequences of unsafe sex and to make them more aware of
the fact that he or she answering the questions could be one of those involved
in the given scenarios.
Several leading entertainment media companies are promoting
the National Campaign’s quiz, including ABC Daytime’s “One Life to Live,” which
teaches teenagers about sex, love, relationships and preventing teen pregnancy,
The Candie’s Foundation, NBC’s “The Baby Borrowers,” Fox Broadcasting Co. and The
N, Nickelodeon's network for teens.
More details you can find on their web sites at: http://blogs.abc.com/kristen;
http://www.candiesfoundation.org;
http://www.nbc.com; http://www.the-n.com; http://www.fox.com.
Among the top websites for teens that are featuring the
National Campaign message are ThinkMtv.com, CWTV.com, Sewenteen.com and
YourProm.com.
Teens can also find out more about Teen Pregnancy Prevention Month at www.teenpregnancy.org.