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We need reproductive and sexual health education

A significant number of scientific and social research studies stress the importance of sex education at secondary school level.

A significant number of scientific and social research studies stress the importance of sex education at secondary school level. Young teenagers are in need of practical and factual information.

In some communities, issues linked to sexuality are taboo and people don't discuss them in homes, schools and centres. Now, as a result, teenagers are in danger of sexually transmitted infections, mental illness, and chronic health problems as well as of LGBTQ discrimination and school bullying.

One of the challenges here is a lack of teachers who possess the necessary knowledge and training to distribute appropriate and correct information about sex and reproductive health. Additional barriers include opposition from cultural and religious leaders, as well as the absence of sex and reproductive health education generally, both at a local and EU level.

Let's unify and provide teachers with the right information, backed by scientists and health specialists, as a starting point.

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What people think

2 comments on We need reproductive and sexual health education
Beatriz  • 23 March 2023

YES!!
Sexual education in my school consisted of a nurse going there and giving a lecture about safe sex, and how to wear a condom, and she also talked briefly about STDs.
Needless to say that unfortunately this talk was very seldom held and it was based on HETEROSEXUALITY. There is no talk about sexual orientations, gender identity, trans people, mental health related to gender identity issues (gender dysphoria, etc.), so many things that should be discussed...

Response to Beatriz by Benedek  • 06 April 2023

The nurse perspective was right according to the situation. She is not an expert in the mental side of sexuality, as many more healthcare worker, so she discussed the practical and ethical side. When we are talking about reproduction and sex education, we want to avoid the not planned pregnancies and infections, that is our top priority.
For the mental side, it is necessary another specialist, a psychologist who have better understanding in this topic. This should be discussed too, but not in exchange to have less discussion in the practical, medical part.

Any thoughts on this idea?

89 votes with an average rating of 1.4.