News Release

U of M Medical School report details a decrease in teen pregnancy, birth and STI rates

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This year’s annual report from the University of Minnesota Medical School’s Healthy Youth Development - Prevention Research Center (HYD-PRC) highlights that pregnancy, birth and sexually transmitted infections (STI) rates have decreased among Minnesota youth. 

The 2022 Minnesota Adolescent Sexual Health Report notes that chlamydia and gonorrhea rates decreased among Minnesota adolescents from 2020 to 2021. Minnesota pregnancy and birth rates continue to be at historic lows for 15- to 19-year-olds, with birth rates decreasing across every racial and ethnic group in Minnesota.

“Although chlamydia and gonorrhea rates decreased in 2021, STIs among youth continue to be a public health crisis. Chlamydia is up 54 percent since 2004, while gonorrhea has increased by 82 percent in that same time period,” said Jill Farris, MPH, director of Adolescent Sexual Health Training and Education for the HYD-PRC at the Medical School on the Twin Cities campus.

The report details that disparities in sexual health outcomes — by geography, race and ethnicity — continue to persist. Rural areas in Minnesota continue to experience the highest teen birth rates in the state. Birth rates for American Indian, Black, Hispanic and Asian/Pacific Islander youth are higher than they are for white youth. Additionally, birth rates for American Indian, Asian/Pacific Islander and Hispanic youth are higher than national figures.

“It is clear from this data that young people need and deserve access to high quality sexual health information. Our report details an in-press study by University researchers, which found that an overwhelming majority of parents — from various communities, income and education levels, ethnicities and religious beliefs — want broad, developmentally appropriate and medically accurate sexuality education in schools,” said Farris.

Over 90 percent of Minnesota parents surveyed want public school teachers to teach abstinence and science-based, comprehensive sexuality education, with 96 percent of parents wanting the information young people receive to be medically accurate. An overwhelming majority of parents agree that students should be encouraged to talk to a parent or guardian about sex and sexuality.

Comprehensive sexuality education in schools includes information about puberty, reproductive anatomy, healthy relationships and sexual abuse prevention. Most parents agree their children should start learning the basics in elementary school. 

"Sexuality education helps young people become healthy adults," said Farris. "Research shows that high quality sexual health education correlates to better academic performance, development of healthy relationships, delayed initiation of sexual activity, prevention of child sexual abuse and increased media literacy. Our children deserve sexual health education that gives them the space to learn, question and clarify their values." 

Farris notes that there are several ways to start a conversation for parents and guardians. These include:

  • Being a trusted adult in their child’s life; 

  • Talk with other parents at the child's school; and

  • Contact elected officials to advocate for adopting clear, medically accurate standards for sexual health education.
     

The full report aims to help Minnesotans understand the current landscape of young people’s sexual and reproductive health and how it is tied more broadly to healthy youth development. Interactive, individualized reports for each of Minnesota’s 87 counties are also provided. To learn more about the Healthy Youth Development-Prevention Research Center, visit this website

 

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About the University of Minnesota Medical School
The University of Minnesota Medical School is at the forefront of learning and discovery, transforming medical care and educating the next generation of physicians. Our graduates and faculty produce high-impact biomedical research and advance the practice of medicine. We acknowledge that the U of M Medical School, both the Twin Cities campus and Duluth campus, is located on traditional, ancestral, and contemporary lands of the Dakota and the Ojibwe, and scores of other Indigenous people, and we affirm our commitment to tribal communities and their sovereignty as we seek to improve and strengthen our relations with tribal nations. For more information about the U of M Medical School, please visit med.umn.edu

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