Fewer US high school students having sex: report
By Matthew Bigg
ATLANTA (Reuters) – Fewer U.S. high school students are
having sex, and the ones who do are less likely to have
multiple partners, according to a report issued on Thursday by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Some 46.8 percent of students said they engaged in sexual
intercourse in a 2005 survey, down from 54.1 percent in 1991,
according to the report.
Some 14.3 percent of students in 2005 said they have had
multiple partners, defined as sex with four different people
during one’s lifetime. That figure is down from 18.7 percent in
1991.
At the same time, the number of students who say they used
a condom the last time they had intercourse rose to 62.8
percent in 2005 from 46.2 percent in 1991, the survey said.
The report was based on student responses to anonymous,
self-administered questionnaires in public and private schools
in all 50 states and the District of Columbia by the CDC’s
Youth Risk Behavior Surveys.
One aim was to determine the extent to which U.S. students
were at risk from HIV or other behavior-related illnesses. High
school students are generally aged 15 to 18.
Some 2.1 percent of students said they had injected illegal
drugs at least once, the same as in 1995, the survey said.
“During 1995-2005, the percentage of U.S. high school
students who ever injected drugs remained less than 4 percent.
However, many students still engage in HIV-related risk
behaviors,” the report said.
The report was published ahead of the 16th International
AIDS conference, billed as the world’s largest, which starts
August 13 in Toronto, Canada.
