National Teen Pregnancy Prevention Day Conference Call

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To honor National Teen Pregnancy Prevention Day (May 6th), RH Reality Check hosted an audio press conference with four experts and advocates on teen pregnancy prevention and comprehensive sex education programs. 

 

Listen to the audio media conference here: 

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After more than a decade of decline, both teen pregnancy rates and the overall number of teen births in the United States have started rising again throughout the country, erasing hard-won gains.  As the National Campaign for the Prevention of Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy notes, the rise in teen pregnancy rates is the result of, among other things:

 

  • More sex and less contraception;
  • Declining concerns among teens about HIV and AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections;
  • Changing demographics in the populations at risk;
  • Lack of funding for effective programs.

 

To examine these and other issues, the following experts joined RH Reality Check for their audio conference call:

 

  • Bill Albert, Chief Program Officer of The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, a private, non-profit initiative organized in 1996 that focuses on preventing both teen pregnancy and unplanned pregnancy among single, young adults.
  • Lori Casillas, Executive Director of the Colorado Organization on Adolescent Pregnancy, Parenting, and Prevention (COAPPP), a statewide organization that works with communities and individuals in Colorado to promote the healthy sexual and reproductive development of all teens and advance the well-being of parenting teens.
  • Forrest Alton, Executive Director of the South Carolina Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, which reaches over 1,000 people in each of South Carolina's 46 counties on an annual basis with education, technical assistance, public awareness campaigns, advocacy, and research.
  • Shelby Knox who grew up as a conservative Southern Baptist in Texas and turned toward activism in response to what she saw as the danger of abstinence-only-until marriage programs. Shelby, who recently graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a degree in Political Science, has traveled across the nation to speak to young people about the importance of comprehensive sex education and the power of youth activism, using the film that carries her name, The Education of Shelby Knox, as a vehicle for discussion. She currently lives in New York City and is a full time speaker and organizer working with progressive organizations to promote sex education, women's rights, and youth empowerment.

 

Weren't able to make the call? Interested in being a part of these audio conferences featuring leading experts discussing cutting edge issues in the field of reproductive and sexual health and rights? Join our media and blogger email list and don't miss out!

Follow Jodi Jacobson on Twitter, @jljacobson

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