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Teenagers who engage in sexual intercourse are more likely
to suffer from depression and attempt suicide than teens who
are abstinent, according to a study.
The findings are especially significant for young girls.
About 25 percent of sexually active girls say they are depressed
all, most, or a lot of the time, compared to eight percent
of girls who are not sexually active.
The study used selected federal data on 2,800 students aged
between 14 and 17 years. The youth were not diagnosed as clinically
depressed but rather rated their own "general state of
continuing unhappiness."
Researchers noted that they did not find a causal link between
unhappiness and sexual activity, as that would be nearly impossible
to prove.
The study found that about 14 percent of girls who have had
intercourse have attempted suicide compared with five percent
of girls who have not had intercourse.
About six percent of sexually active boys have attempted
suicide compared with less than one percent of sexually inactive
boys.
According to researchers, the findings send a different message
from the one portrayed by popular culture, in which "all
forms of non-marital sexual activity are wonderful and glorious,
and the younger the teen the better."
USA
Today June 3, 2003
COMMENT
by Christian Medical Association Executive Director David Stevens,
M.D.:
The abstinence message is beginning to get through to
teenagers.
Mainline doctors are taking note of the epidemic of sexually
transmitted diseases and the NIH study that showed the ineffectiveness
of condoms in preventing chlamydia, gonorrhea in women, genital
herpes, syphilis, chancroid and the human papillomavirus
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