| |

Posted 10/19/2005 12:17
AM
Teens define sex in new ways
By Sharon Jayson, USA TODAY
The generational divide between baby-boomer parents
and their teenage offspring is sharpening over sex.
Oral sex, that is.
More than half of 15- to 19-year-olds are doing it,
according to a groundbreaking study by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
The researchers did not ask about the circumstances
in which oral sex occurred, but the report does
provide the first federal data that offer a peek
into the sex lives of American teenagers.
To adults, "oral sex is extremely intimate, and to
some of these young people, apparently it isn't as
much," says Sarah Brown, director of the National
Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy.
"What we're learning here is that adolescents are
redefining what is intimate."
Among teens, oral sex is often viewed so casually
that it needn't even occur within the confines of a
relationship. Some teens say it can take place at
parties, possibly with multiple partners. But they
say the more likely scenario is oral sex within an
existing relationship.
Still, some experts are increasingly worrying that a
generation that approaches intimate behavior so
casually might have difficulty forming healthy
intimate relationships later on.
"My parents' generation sort of viewed oral sex as
something almost greater than sex. Like once you've
had sex, something more intimate is oral sex," says
Carly Donnelly, 17, a high school senior from
Cockeysville, Md.
"Now that some kids are using oral sex as something
that's more casual, it's shocking to (parents)."
David Walsh, a psychologist and author of the
teen-behavior book Why Do They Act That Way?, says
the brain is wired to develop intense physical and
emotional attraction during the teenage years as
part of the maturing process. But he's disturbed by
the casual way sex is often portrayed in the media,
which he says gives teens a distorted view of true
intimacy.
Sex
— even oral sex — "just becomes kind of a
recreational activity that is separate from a close,
personal relationship," he says.
"When the physical part of the relationship races
ahead of everything else, it can almost become the
focus of the relationship," Walsh says, "and they're
not then developing all of the really important
skills like trust and communication and all those
things that are the key ingredients for a healthy,
long-lasting relationship."
"Intimacy has been so devalued," says Doris Fuller
of Sandpoint, Idaho, who, with her two teenage
children, wrote the 2004 book Promise You Won't
Freak Out, which discusses topics such as teen oral
sex.
"What will the impact be on their ultimately more
lasting relationships? I don't think we know yet."
Casual attitude is worrying
Child psychology professor W. Andrew Collins of the
University of Minnesota says a relationship "that's
only about sex is not a high-quality relationship."
In a 28-year study, Collins and his colleagues
followed 180 individuals from birth. His
yet-to-be-published research, presented at a
conference in April, suggests that emotionally
fulfilling high school relationships do help teens
learn important relationship skills.
The researchers did not specifically ask about oral
sex, he says. But relationships that are focused
more on sex tend to be "less sustained, often not
monogamous and with lower levels of satisfaction."
Terri Fisher, an associate professor of psychology
at Ohio State University, says oral sex used to be
considered "exotic." After the sexual revolution of
the 1960s, it was viewed as a more intimate sexual
act than sexual intercourse, but now, in young
people's minds, it's "a more casual act."
Beyond shock, many parents aren't sure what to think
when they discover their children's nonchalant
approach to oral sex.
"It doesn't cross your mind because it's not
something you have done," Fuller says. "Most parents
weren't doing this (as teenagers) in the way these
kids are."
But if parents are looking for reasons to freak out,
the health risk of oral sex apparently isn't one of
them. Teenagers and experts agree that oral sex is
less risky than intercourse because there's no
threat of pregnancy and less chance of contracting a
sexually transmitted disease or HIV.
"The fact that teenagers have oral sex doesn't upset
me much from a public health perspective," says J.
Dennis Fortenberry, a physician who specializes in
adolescent medicine at the Indiana University School
of Medicine.
"From my perspective, relatively few teenagers only
have oral sex. And so for the most part, oral sex,
as for adults, is typically incorporated into a
pattern of sexual behaviors that may vary depending
upon the type of relationship and the timing of a
relationship."
Data don't tell whole story
A study published in the journal Pediatrics in April
supports the view that adolescents believe oral sex
is safer than intercourse, with less risk to their
physical and emotional health.
The study of ethnically diverse high school freshmen
from California found that almost 20% had tried oral
sex, compared with 13.5% who said they had
intercourse.
More of these teens believed oral sex was more
acceptable for their age group than intercourse,
even if the partners are not dating.
"The problem with surveys is they don't tell you the
intimacy sequence," Brown says. "The vast majority
who had intercourse also had oral sex. We don't know
which came first."
The federal study, based on data collected in 2002
and released last month, found that 55% of 15- to
19-year-old boys and 54% of girls reported getting
or giving oral sex, compared with 49% of boys and
53% of girls the same ages who reported having had
intercourse.
Though the study provides data, researchers say, it
doesn't help them understand the role oral sex plays
in the overall relationship; nor does it explain the
fact that today's teens are changing the sequence of
sexual behaviors so that oral sex has skipped ahead
of intercourse.
"All
of us in the field are still trying to get a handle
on how much of this is going on and trying to
understand it from a young person's point of view,"
says Stephanie Sanders, associate director of The
Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and
Reproduction at Indiana University, which
investigates sexual behavior and sexual health.
"Clearly, we need more information about what young
people think is appropriate behavior, under what
circumstances and with whom," Sanders says. "Now we
know a little more about what they're doing but not
what they're thinking."
The $16 million study, which took six years to
develop, complete and analyze, surveyed almost
13,000 teens, men and women ages 15-44 on a variety
of sexual behaviors.
Researchers say that the large sample size, an
increased societal openness about sexual issues and
the fact that the survey was administered via
headphones and computer instead of face to face all
give them confidence that, for the first time, they
have truthful data on these very personal behaviors.
"There is strong evidence that people are more
willing to tell computers things, such as divulge
taboo behaviors, than (they are to tell) a person,"
Sanders says.
More analysis needed
Researchers cannot conclude that the percentage of
teens having oral sex is greater than in the past.
There is no comparison data for girls, and numbers
for boys are about the same as they were a decade
ago in the National Survey of Adolescent Males:
Currently, 38.8% have given oral sex vs. 38.6% in
1995; 51.5% have received it vs. 49.4% in 1995.
Further analyses of the federal data by the private,
non-profit National Campaign to Prevent Teen
Pregnancy and the non-partisan research group Child
Trends find almost 25% of teens who say they are
virgins have had oral sex. Child Trends also
reviewed socioeconomic and other data and found that
those who are white and from middle- and
upper-income families with higher levels of
education are more likely to have oral sex.
Historically, oral sex has been more common among
the more highly educated, Sanders says.
Is intimacy imperiled?
|
Teens and oral sex
Heterosexual oral sex among teenagers ages
15 to 19 varies by age and gender, with
older teens more likely to engage in
intercourse.
percentage of teens who have had
intercourse and their ages:
Boys
15 — 25.1%
16 — 37.5%
17 — 46.9%
18 — 62.4%
19 — 68.9%
Girls
15 — 26.0%
16 — 39.6%
17 — 49.0%
18 — 70.3%
19 — 77.4%
percentage of teens who have had oral sex
and their ages:
Boys
15 — 35.1%
16 — 42.0%
17 — 55.7%
18 — 65.4%
19 — 74.2%
Girls
15 — 26.0%
16 — 42.4%
17 — 55.5%
18 — 70.2%
19 — 74.4%
Source: 2002 National Survey of Family
Growth, Centers for Disease Control of
Prevention |
The survey also found that almost 90% of
teens who have had sexual intercourse also
had oral sex. Among adults 25-44, 90% of men
and 88% of women have had heterosexual oral
sex.
"If we are indeed headed as a culture to
have a total disconnect between intimate
sexual behavior and emotional connection,
we're not forming the basis for healthy
adult relationships," says James Wagoner,
president of Advocates for Youth, a
reproductive-health organization in
Washington.
Oral sex might affect teenagers' self-esteem
most of all, says Paul Coleman, a
Poughkeepsie, N.Y., psychologist and author
of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Intimacy.
"Somebody is going to feel hurt or abused or
manipulated," he says. "Not all encounters
will turn out favorably. ... Teenagers are
not mature enough to know all the
ramifications of what they're doing.
"It's pretending to say it's just sexual and
nothing else. That's an arbitrary slicing up
of the intimacy pie. It's not healthy."
A survey of more than 1,000 teens conducted
with the National Campaign to Prevent Teen
Pregnancy resulted in The Real Truth About
Teens & Sex, a book by Sabrina Weill, a
former editor in chief at Seventeen
magazine. She says casual teen attitudes
toward sex — particularly oral sex — reflect
their confusion about what is normal
behavior. She believes teens are facing an
intimacy crisis that could haunt them in
future relationships.
"When teenagers fool around before they're
ready or have a very casual attitude toward
sex, they proceed toward adulthood with a
lack of understanding about intimacy,"
Weill
says. "What it means to be intimate is not
clearly spelled out for young people by
their parents and people they trust."
Although governmental and educational
campaigns urge teens to delay sex, some
suggest teens have replaced sexual
intercourse with oral sex.
"If you say to teenagers 'no sex before
marriage,' they may interpret that in a
variety of ways," says Fisher. |
Talk is crucial
Experts say parents need to talk to their kids
about sex sooner rather than later. Oral sex needs
to be part of the discussion because these teens are
growing up in a far more sexually open society.
Anecdotal reports for years have focused on teens
"hooking up" casually. Depending on the group, teens
say it can mean kissing, making out or having sex.
"Friends with benefits" is another way of referring
to non-dating relationships, with a form of sex as a
"benefit."
But not all teens treat sex so casually, say teens
from suburban Baltimore who were interviewed by USA
TODAY as part of an informal focus group.
Alex Trazkovich, 17, a high school senior from
Reisterstown, Md., says parents don't hear enough
about teen relationships where there is a lot of
emotional involvement.
"They hear about teens going to the parties and
having lots and lots of sex," he says. "It happens,
but it's not something that happens all the time.
It's more of an extreme behavior."
Top |
|