Comprehensive sex education is a critical component of sexual and reproductive health care.
Developing a healthy sexuality is a core developmental milestone for child and adolescent health.
Youth need developmentally appropriate information about their sexuality and how it relates to their bodies, community, culture, society, mental health, and relationships with family, peers, and romantic partners.
AAP supports broad access to comprehensive sex education, wherein all children and adolescents have access to developmentally appropriate, evidence-based education that provides the knowledge they need to:
- Develop a safe and positive view of sexuality.
- Build healthy relationships.
- Make informed, safe, positive choices about their sexuality and sexual health.
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Comprehensive sex education involves teaching about all aspects of human sexuality, including:
- Anatomy.
- Consent.
- Cyber solicitation/bullying.
- Healthy sexual development.
- Body image.
- Sexual orientation.
- Gender identity.
- Pleasure from sex.
- Sexual abuse.
- Sexual behavior.
- Sexual reproduction.
- Sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
- Abstinence.
- Contraception.
- Interpersonal relationships.
- Reproductive coercion.
- Reproductive rights.
- Reproductive responsibilities.
Comprehensive sex education programs have several common elements:
- Utilize evidence-based, medically accurate curriculum that can be adapted for youth with disabilities.
- Employ developmentally appropriate information, learning strategies, teaching methods, and materials.
- Provide basic functional knowledge around 6 key topics:
- Human development, including anatomy, puberty, body image, sexual orientation, and gender identity.
- Relationships, including families, peers, dating, marriage, and raising children.
- Personal skills, including values, decision making, communication, assertiveness, negotiation, and help-seeking.
- Sexual behavior, including abstinence, masturbation, shared sexual behavior, pleasure from esx, and sexual dysfunction across the lifespan.
- Sexual health, including contraception, pregnancy, prenatal care, abortion, STIs, HIV and AIDS, sexual abuse, assault, and violence.
- Society and culture, including gender roles, diversity, and the intersection of sexuality and the law, religion, media, and the arts.
- Create an opportunity for youth to question, explore, and assess both personal and societal attitudes around gender and sexuality.
- Focus on personal practices, skills, and behaviors for healthy relationships, including an explicit focus on communication, consent, refusal skills/accepting rejection, violence prevention, personal safety, decision making, and bystander intervention.
- Help youth exercise responsibility in sexual relationships.
- Include information on how to come forward if a student is being sexually abused.
- Address education from a trauma-informed, culturally responsive approach that bridges mental, emotional, and relational health.
Comprehensive sex education should occur across the developmental spectrum, beginning at early ages and continuing throughout childhood and adolescence:
- Sex education is most effective when it begins before the initiation of sexual activity.
- Young children can understand concepts related to bodies, gender, and relationships.
- Sex education programs should build an early foundation and scaffold learning with developmentally appropriate content across grade levels.
- AAP Policy outlines considerations for providing developmentally appropriate sex education throughout early childhood, middle childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood.
Most adolescents report receiving some type of formal sex education before age 18. While sex education is typically associated with schools, comprehensive sex education can be delivered in several complementary settings:
- Schools:
- Schools can implement comprehensive sex education curriculum across all grade levels
- The Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS) provides guidelines for providing developmentally appropriate comprehensive sex education across grades K-12.
- Clinical practice:
- Pediatric health clinicians and other health care providers are uniquely positioned to provide longitudinal sex education to children, adolescents, and young adults.
- Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents outlines clinical considerations for providing comprehensive sex education at all developmental stages, as a part of preventive health care.
- Community or faith-based organizations:
- Research suggests that community-based organizations should be included as a source for comprehensive sexual health promotion.
- Faith-based communities have developed sex education curricula for their congregations or local chapters that emphasize the moral and ethical aspects of sexuality and decision-making.
- At Home:
- Parents and caregivers can serve as the primary sex educators for their children, by teaching fundamental lessons about bodies, development, gender, and relationships.
- Many factors impact the sex education that youth receive at home, including parent/caregiver knowledge, skills, comfort, culture, beliefs, and social norms.
- Online
- Virtual sex education can take away feelings of embarrassment or stigma and can allow for more youth to access high quality sex education.
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Comprehensive sex education provides children and adolescents with the information that they need to:
- Understand their body, gender identity, and sexuality.
- Build and maintain healthy and safe relationships.
- Engage in healthy communication and decision-making around sex.
- Practice healthy sexual behavior.
- Understand and access care to support their sexual and reproductive health.
Comprehensive sex education programs have demonstrated success in reducing rates of sexual activity, sexual risk behaviors, STIs, and adolescent pregnancy and delaying sexual activity. Many systematic reviews of the literature have indicated that comprehensive sex education promotes healthy sexual behaviors:
- Reduced sexual activity.
- Reduced number of sexual partners.
- Reduced frequency of unprotected sex.
- Increased condom use.
- Increased contraceptive use.
However, comprehensive sex education curriculum goes beyond risk-reduction, by covering a broader range of content that has been shown to support social-emotional learning, positive communication skills, and development of healthy relationships.
A 2021 review of the literature found that comprehensive sex education programs that use a positive, affirming, and inclusive approach to human sexuality are associated with concrete benefits across 5 key domains:
Benefits of comprehensive sex education programs
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When children and adolescents lack access to comprehensive sex education, they do not get the information they need to make informed, healthy decisions about their lives, relationships, and behaviors.
Several trends in sexual health in the US highlight the need for comprehensive sex education for all youth.
Education about condom and contraceptive use is needed:
- 55% of US high school students report having sexual intercourse by age 18.
- Self-reported condom use has decreased significantly among high school students.
- Only 9% of sexually active high school students report using both a condom for STI-prevention and a more effective form of birth control to prevent pregnancy.
STI prevention is needed:
- Adolescents and young adults are disproportionately impacted by STIs.
- Cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis are rising rapidly among young people.
- When left untreated, these infections can lead to infertility, adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes, and increased risk of acquiring new STIs.
- Youth need comprehensive, unbiased information about STI prevention, including human papillomavirus (HPV).
Continued prevention of unintended pregnancy is needed:
- Overall US birth rates among adolescent mothers have declined over the last 3 decades.
- There are significant geographic disparities in adolescent pregnancy rates, with higher rates of pregnancy in rural counties and in southern and southwestern states.
- Social drivers of health and systemic inequities have caused racial and ethnic disparities in adolescent pregnancy rates.
- Eliminating disparities in adolescent pregnancy and birth rates can increase health equity, improve health and life outcomes, and reduce the economic impact of adolescent parenting.
Misinformation about sexual health is easily available online:
- Internet use is nearly universal among US children and adolescents.
- Adolescents report seeking sexual health information online.
- Sexual health websites that adolescents visit can contain inaccurate information.
Prevention of sex abuse, dating violence, and unhealthy relationships is needed:
- Child sexual abuse is common: 25% of girls and 8% of boys experience sexual abuse during childhood.
- Youth who experience sexual abuse have long-term impacts on their physical, mental, and behavioral health.
- Dating violence (DV) is common among US high school students.
- 1 in 11 female and 1 in 14 male students report physical DV in the last year.
- 1 in 8 female and 1 in 26 male students report sexual DV in the last year.
- Youth who experience DV have higher rates of anxiety, depression, substance use, antisocial behaviors, and suicide risk.
The quality and content of sex education in US schools varies widely.
There is significant variation in the quality of sex education taught in US schools, leading to disparities in attitudes, health information, and outcomes. The majority of sex education programs in the US tend to focus on public health goals of decreasing unintended pregnancies and preventing STIs, via individual behavior change.
There are three primary categories of sex educational programs taught in the US:
- Abstinence-only education, which teaches that abstinence is expected until marriage and typically excludes information around the utility of contraception or condoms to prevent pregnancy and STIs.
- Abstinence-plus education, which promotes abstinence but includes information on contraception and condoms.
- Comprehensive sex education, which provides medically accurate, age-appropriate information around development, sexual behavior (including abstinence), healthy relationships, life and communication skills, sexual orientation, and gender identity.
State laws impact the curriculum covered in sex education programs. According to a report from the Guttmacher Institute:
- 26 US states and Washington DC mandate sex education and HIV education.
- 18 states require that sex education content be medically accurate.
- 39 states require that sex education programs provide information on abstinence.
- 20 states require that sex education programs provide information on contraception.
US states have varying requirements on sex education content related to sexual orientation:
- 10 states require sex education curriculum to include affirming content on LGBTQ2S+ identities or discussion of sexual health for youth who are LGBTQ2S+.
- 7 states have sex education curricular requirements that discriminate against individuals who are LGBTQ2S+.Youth who live in these states may face additional barriers to accessing sexual health information.
Abstinence-only sex education programs do not meet the needs of children and adolescents.
While abstinence is 100% effective in preventing pregnancy and STIs, research has conclusively shown that abstinence-only sex education programs do not support healthy sexual development in youth.
Abstinence-only programs are ineffective in reaching their stated goals, as evidenced by the data below:
- Abstinence-only programs are unsuccessful in delaying sex until marriage.
- Abstinence-only sex education programs do not impact the rates of pregnancy, STIs, or HIV in adolescents.
- Youth who take a “virginity pledge” as part of abstinence-only education programs have the same rates of premarital sex as their peers who do not take pledges, but are less likely to use contraceptives.
- US states that emphasize abstinence-only education have higher rates of adolescent pregnancy and birth.
Abstinence-only programs can harm the healthy sexual and mental development of youth by:
- Withholding information or providing inaccurate information about sexuality and sexual behavior.
- Contributing to fear, shame, and stigma around sexual behaviors.
- Not sharing information on contraception and barrier protection or overstating the risks of contraception.
- Utilizing heteronormative framing and stigma or discrimination against students who are LGBTQ2S+.
- Reinforcing harmful gender stereotypes.
- Ignoring the needs of youth who are already sexually active by withholding education around contraception and STI prevention.
Abstinence-plus sex education programs focus solely on decreasing unintended pregnancy and STIs.
Abstinence-plus sex education programs promote abstinence until marriage. However, these programs also provide information on contraception and condom use to prevent unintended pregnancy and STIs.
Research has demonstrated that abstinence-plus programs have an impact on sexual behavior and safety, including:
- HIV prevention.
- Increase in condom use.
- Reduction in number of sexual partners.
- Delay in initiation of sexual behavior.
While these programs add another layer of education, they do not address the broader spectrum of sexuality, gender identity, and relationship skills, thus withholding critical information and skill-building that can impact healthy sexual development.
AAP and other national medical and public health associations support comprehensive sex education for youth.
Given the evidence outlined above, AAP and other national medical organizations oppose abstinence-only education and endorse comprehensive sex education that includes both abstinence promotion and provision of accurate information about contraception, STIs, and sexuality.
National medical and public health organizations supporting comprehensive sex education include:
- American Academy of Pediatrics.
- American Academy of Family Physicians.
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
- American Medical Association.
- American Public Health Association.
- Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine.
Pediatric clinics provide a unique opportunity for comprehensive sex education.
Pediatric health clinicians typically have longitudinal care relationships with their patients and families, and thus have unique opportunities to address comprehensive sex education across all stages of development.
The clinical visit can serve as a useful adjunct to support comprehensive sex education provided in schools, or to fill gaps in knowledge for youth who are exposed to abstinence-only or abstinence-plus curricula.
AAP policy and Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents provide recommendations for comprehensive sex education in clinical settings, including:
- Encouraging parent-child discussions on sexuality, contraception, and internet/media use.
- Understanding diverse experiences and beliefs related to sexuality and sex education and meeting the unique needs of individual patients and families.
- Including discussions around healthy relationships, dating violence, and intimate partner violence in clinical care.
- Discussing methods of contraception and STI/HPV prevention prior to onset of sexual intercourse.
- Providing proactive and developmentally appropriate sex education to all youth, including children and adolescents with special health care needs.
Perspective
Karen Torres, Youth activist
There were two cardboard bears, and a person explained that one bear wears a bikini to the beach and the other bear wears shorts – that is the closest thing I ever got to sex ed throughout my entire K-12 education. I often think about that bear lesson because it was the day our institutions failed to teach me anything about my body, relationships, consent, and self-advocacy, which became even more evident after I was sexually assaulted at 16 years old. My story is not unique, I know that many young people have been through similar traumas, but many of us were also subjected to days, months, and years of silence and embarrassment because we were never given the knowledge to know how to spot abuse or the language to ask for help. Comprehensive sex ed is so much more than people make it out to be, it teaches about sex but also about different types of experiences, how to respect one another, how to communicate in uncomfortable situations, how to ask for help and an insurmountable amount of other valuable lessons.
From these lessons, people become well-rounded, people become more empathetic to other experiences, and people become better. I believe comprehensive sex ed is vital to all people and would eventually work as a part to build more compassionate communities.
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Many US children and adolescents do not receive comprehensive sex education; and rates of formal sex education have declined significantly in recent decades.
Barriers to accessing comprehensive sex education include:
Misinformation, stigma, and fear of negative reactions:
- Misinformation and stigma about the content of sex education curriculum has been the primary barrier to equitable access to comprehensive sex education in schools for decades.
- Despite widespread parental support for sex education in schools, fears of negative public/parent reactions have led school administrators to limit youth access to the information they need to make healthy decisions about their sexuality for nearly a half-century.
- In recent years, misinformation campaigns have spread false information about the framing and content of comprehensive sex education programs, causing debates and polarization at school board meetings.
- Nearly half of sex education teachers report that concerns about parent, student, or administrator responses are a barrier to provision of comprehensive sex education.
- Opponents of comprehensive sex education often express concern that this education will lead youth to have sex; however, research has demonstrated that this is not the case. Instead, comprehensive sex ed is associated with delays in initiation of sexual behavior, reduced frequency of sexual intercourse, a reduction in number of partners, and an increase in condom use.
- Some populations of youth lack access to comprehensive sex education due to a societal belief that they are asexual, in need of protection, or don’t need to learn about sex. This barrier particularly impacts youth with disabilities or special health care needs.
- Sex ed curricula in some schools perpetuate gender/sex stereotypes, which could contribute to negative gender stereotypes and negative attitudes towards sex.
Inconsistencies in school-based sex education:
- There is significant variation in the content of sex education taught in schools in the US, and many programs that carry the same label (eg, “abstinence-plus”) vary widely in curriculum.
- While decisions about sex education curriculum are made at the state level, the federal government has provided funding to support abstinence-only education for decades, which incentivizes schools to use these programs.
- Since 1996, more than $2 billion in federal funds have been spent to support abstinence-only sex education in schools.
- This has impacted state laws about sex education:
- It is not standard to include information on how to come forward if a student is being sexually abused, and many schools do not have a process for disclosures made.
- Because of this, abstinence-only programs are commonly used in US schools, despite overwhelming evidence that they are ineffective in delaying sexual behavior until marriage, and withhold critical information that youth need for healthy sexual and relationship development.
Need for resources and training:
- Integration of comprehensive sex education into school curriculum requires financial resources to strengthen and expand evidence-based programs.
- Successful implementation of comprehensive sex education requires a trained workforce of teachers who can address the curriculum in age-appropriate ways for students in all grade-levels.
- Education, training, and technical assistance are needed to support pediatric health clinicians in addressing comprehensive sex education in clinical settings, as a complement to school-based education.
Lack of diversity and cultural awareness in curricula:
- A history of systemic racism, discrimination, and long-standing health, social and systemic inequities have created racial and ethnic disparities in access to sexual health services and representation in sex education materials. The legacy of intergenerational trauma in the medical system should be acknowledged in sex education curricula.
- Sex education curriculum is often centered on a white audience, and does not address or reflect the role of systemic racism in sexuality and development.
- Traditional abstinence-focused sex education programs have a heteronormative focus and do not address the unique needs of youth who are LGBTQ2S+.
- Sex education programs often do not address reproductive body diversity, the needs of those with differences in sex development, and those who identify as intersex.
- Sex education programs often do not reflect the unique needs of youth with disabilities or special health care needs.
- Sex education programs are often not tailored to meet the religious considerations of faith communities.
- There is a need for sex education programs designed to help youth navigate sexual health and development in the context of their own culture and community.
Disparities in access to comprehensive sex education.
The barriers listed above limit access to comprehensive sex education in schools and communities. While these barriers impact youth across the US, there are some populations who are less likely to have access to comprehensive to sex education.
Youth who are LGBTQ2S+:
- Most sex education curriculum is not inclusive or representative of LGBTQ2S+ identities and experiences.
- Only 8% of students who are LGBTQ2S+ report having received sexual education that was inclusive.
- Students who are LGBTQ2S+ are 50% more likely than their peers who are heterosexual to report that sex education in their schools was not useful to them.
- Only 13% of youth who are bisexual+ and 10% of youth who are transgender and gender expansive report receiving sex education in schools that felt personally relevant.
- Only 20% of youth who are Black and LGBTQ2S+ and 13% of youth who are Latinx and LGBTQ2S+ report receiving sex education in schools that felt personally relevant.
- Youth who are LGBTQ2S+ face additional access barriers depending on geography:
- Only 10 US states require affirming content on LGBTQ2S+ relationships in sex education curriculum.
- 7 states have sex education curricular requirements that discriminate against individuals who are LGBTQ2S+.Youth who live in these states may face additional barriers to accessing sexual health information.
Youth with disabilities or special health care needs:
- Youth with disabilities or special health care needs have a particular need for comprehensive sex education, as these youth are less likely to learn about sex or sexuality form their parents, healthcare providers, or peer groups.
- Youth with disabilities are far less likely than other youth to receive sex education at school.
- In a national survey, only half of youth with disabilities report that they have participated in sex education.
- Typical sex education may not be sufficient for youth with Autism Spectrum Disorder, and special methods and curricula are necessary to match their needs.
- Youth with special health care needs often have limited access to sex education due to inaccurate beliefs that they:
- Lack the desire or maturity for romantic or sexual relationships.
- Are not subject to sexual abuse.
- Do not need sex education.
- Only 3 states explicitly include youth with disabilities within their sex education requirements.
Youth from historically underserved communities:
- Students who are Black in the US are more likely than students who are white to receive abstinence-only sex education, despite significant support from parents and students who are Black for comprehensive sex education.
- Youth who are Black and female are less likely than peers who are white to receive education about where to obtain birth control prior to initiating sexual activity.
- Youth who are Black and male and Hispanic are less likely than their peers who are white to receive formal education on STI prevention or contraception prior to initiating sexual activity.
- Youth who are Hispanic and female are less likely to receive instruction about waiting to have sex than youth of other ethnicities.
- Tribal health educators report challenges in identifying culturally relevant sex education curriculum for youth who are American Indian/Alaska Native.
- In a 2019 study, youth who were LGBTQ2S+ and Black, Latinx, or Asian reported receiving inadequate sex education due to feeling unrepresented, unsupported, stigmatized, or bullied.
- In survey research, many young adults who are Asian American report that they received inadequate sex education in school.
Youth from rural communities:
- Adolescents who live in rural communities have faced disproportionate declines in formal sex education over the past two decades, compared with peers in urban/suburban areas.
- Students who live in rural communities report that the sex education curriculum in their schools does not serve their needs.
Youth from communities and schools that are low-income:
- Data has shown an association between schools that are low-resource and lower adolescent sexual health knowledge, due to a combination of fewer school resources and higher poverty rates/associated unmet health needs in the student body.
- Youth with family incomes above 200% of the federal poverty line are more likely to receive education about STI prevention, contraception, and “saying no to sex,” than their peers below 200% of the poverty line.
Youth who receive sex education in some religious settings:
- Most adolescents who identify as female and who attended church-based sex education programs report instructions on waiting until marriage for sex, while few report receiving education about birth control.
- Young people who received sex education in religious schools report that education focused on the risks of sexual behavior (STIs, pregnancy) and religious guilt; leading to them feeling under-equipped to make informed decisions about sex and sexuality later in life.
- Youth and teachers from religious schools have identified a need for comprehensive sex education curriculum that is tailored to the needs of faith communities.
Youth who live in states that limit the topics that can be covered in sex education:
- Students who live in the 34 states that require sex education programs to stress abstinence are less likely to have access to critical information on STI prevention and contraception.
- Other state laws that may impact youth access to critical health information include:
- Prohibitions on addressing abortion in sex education or mandates that sex education curricula include medically inaccurate information on abortion designed to dissuade youth from terminating a pregnancy.
- Limitations on the types of contraception that can be covered in sex education curricula.
- Requirements that sex education teachers promote heterosexual, monogamous marriage in sex education.
- Lack of requirements to address healthy relationships and communication skills.
- Lack of requirements for teacher training or certification.
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Comprehensive sex education has significant benefits for children and adolescents.
Youth who are exposed to comprehensive sex education programs in school demonstrate healthier sexual behaviors:
- Increased rates of contraception and condom use.
- Fewer unplanned pregnancies.
- Lower rates of STIs and HIV.
- Delayed initiation of sexual behavior.
More broadly, comprehensive sexual education impacts overall social-emotional health, including:
- Enhanced understanding of gender and sexuality.
- Lower rates of homophobia and related bullying.
- Lower rates of dating violence, intimate partner violence, sexual assault, and child sexual abuse.
- Healthier relationships and communication skills.
- Understanding of reproductive rights and responsibilities.
- Improved social-emotional learning, media literacy, and academic achievement.
Comprehensive sex education curriculum goes beyond risk reduction, to ensure that youth are supported in understanding their identity and sexuality and making informed decisions about their relationships, behaviors, and future. These benefits are critical to healthy sexual development.
Impacts of a lack of access to comprehensive sex education.
When youth are denied access to comprehensive sex education, they do not get the information and skill-building required for healthy sexual development. As such, they face unnecessary barriers to understanding their gender and sexuality, building positive interpersonal relationships, and making informed decisions about their sexual behavior and sexual health.
Impacts of a lack of comprehensive sex education for all youth can include:
- Less use of condoms, leading to higher risk of STIs, including HIV.
- Less use of contraception, leading to higher risk of unplanned pregnancy.
- Less understanding and increased stigma and shame around the spectrum of gender and sexual identity.
- Perpetuated stigma and embarrassment related to sex and sexual identity.
- Perpetuated gender stereotypes and traditional gender roles.
- Higher rates of youth turning to unreliable sources for information about sex, including the internet, the media, and informal learning from peer networks.
- Challenges in interpersonal communication.
- Challenges in building, maintaining, and recognizing safe, healthy peer and romantic relationships.
- Lower understanding of the importance of obtaining and giving enthusiastic consent prior to sexual activity.
- Less awareness of appropriate/inappropriate touch and lower reporting of child sexual abuse.
- Higher rates of dating violence and intimate partner violence, and less intervention from bystanders.
- Higher rates of homophobia and homophobic bullying.
- Unsafe school environments.
- Lower rates of media literacy.
- Lower rates of social-emotional learning.
- Lower recognition of gender equity, rights, and social justice.
In addition, the lack of access to comprehensive sex education can exacerbate existing health disparities, with disproportionate impacts on specific populations of youth.
Youth who identify as women, youth from communities of color, youth with disabilities, and youth who are LGBTQ2S+ are particularly impacted by inequitable access to comprehensive sex education, as this lack of education can impact their health, safety, and self-identity. Examples of these impacts are outlined below.
A lack of comprehensive sex education can harm young women.
- Young women have unique needs related to STI and pregnancy prevention:
- Female bodies are more prone to STI infection and more likely to experience complications of STI infection than male bodies.
- Female bodies are disproportionately impacted by long-term health consequences of STIs, including pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility, and ectopic pregnancy.
- Female bodies are less likely to have or recognize symptoms of certain STI infections.
- Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common STI in young women, and can cause long-term health consequences such as genital warts and cervical cancer.
- Women bear the health and economic effects of unplanned pregnancy.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses these issues by providing medically-accurate, evidence based information on effective strategies to prevent STI infections and unplanned pregnancy.
- Young women are at higher risk of abuse and violence:
- Students who identify as female are more likely to experience sexual or physical dating violence than their peers who identify as male. Some of this may be attributed to underreporting by males due to stigma.
- Students who identify as female are bullied on school property more often than students who identify as male.
- Young women ages 16-19 are at higher risk of rape, attempted rape, or sexual assault than the general population.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses these issues by guiding the development of healthy self-identities, challenging harmful gender norms, and building the skills required for respectful, equitable relationships.
A lack of comprehensive sex education can harm youth from communities of color.
- Youth of color deserve to see themselves represented in sex education curricula:
- Youth of color benefit from seeing themselves represented in sex education curriculum.
- Sex education programs that use a framing of diversity, equity, rights, and social justice, informed by an understanding of systemic racism and discrimination, have been found to increase positive attitudes around reproductive rights in all students.
- There is a critical need for sex education programs that reflect youth’s cultural values and community.
- Comprehensive sex education can address these needs by developing curriculum that is inclusive of diverse communities, relationships, and cultures, so that youth see themselves represented in their education.
- Youth of color have unique needs related to STI and pregnancy prevention:
- A history of systemic racism, discrimination, and long-standing health, social and systemic inequities have created disparities in access to sexual and reproductive health services, leading to:
- Racial and ethnic disparities in STI and HIV infection.
- Racial and ethnic disparities in unplanned pregnancy and births among adolescents.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses these issues by providing medically-accurate, evidence based information on effective strategies to prevent STI infections and unplanned pregnancy.
- A history of systemic racism, discrimination, and long-standing health, social and systemic inequities have created disparities in access to sexual and reproductive health services, leading to:
- Youth of color face higher risks of abuse and violence:
- Nearly half of youth who are Black ages 13-21 report having been pressured into sexual activity.
- Adolescent experience with dating violence is most prevalent among youth who are American Indian/Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, and multiracial.
- Adolescents who are Latinx are more likely than their peers who are non-Latinx to report physical dating violence.
- Youth who are Black and Latinx and who experience bullying are more likely to suffer negative impacts on academic performance than their white peers.
- Students who are Asian American and Pacific Islander report bullying and harassment due to race, ethnicity, and language.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses these issues by guiding the development of healthy self-identities, challenging harmful stereotypes, and building the skills required for respectful, equitable relationships.
- Youth of color are negatively impacted by misperceptions in the media:
- Young people of color—specifically those from Black, Asian-American, and Latinx communities– are often hyper-sexualized in popular media, leading to societal perceptions that youth are “older” or more sexually experienced than their white peers.
- Young men of color—specifically those from Black and Latinx communities—are often portrayed as aggressive or criminal in popular media, leading to societal perceptions that youth are dangerous or more sexually aggressive or experienced than white peers.
- These media portrayals can lead to disparities in public perceptions of youth behavior, which can impact school discipline, lost mentorship and leadership opportunities, less access to educational opportunities afforded to white peers, and greater involvement in the juvenile justice system.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses these issues by including positive representations of diverse youth in curriculum, challenging harmful stereotypes, and building the skills required for respectful relationships.
A lack of comprehensive sex education can harm youth with disabilities or special health care needs.
- Youth with disabilities benefit from being included and represented in sex education curricula:
- Youth with disabilities need inclusive, developmentally-appropriate, representative sex education to support their health, identity, and development.
- Youth with special health care needs often initiate romantic relationships and sexual behavior during adolescence, similar to their peers.
- Youth with disabilities and special health care needs benefit from seeing themselves represented in sex education to access the information and skills to build healthy identities and relationships.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses this need by including positive representation of youth with disabilities and special health care needs in curriculum and providing developmentally-appropriate sex education to all youth.
- Youth with special health care needs have unique needs related to abuse and violence:
- When youth with disabilities and special health care needs do not get access to the comprehensive sex education that they need, they are at increased risk of sexual abuse or being viewed as a sexual offender.
- Youth with disabilities and special health care needs are more likely than peers without disabilities to report coercive sex, exploitation, and sexual abuse.
- Youth with disabilities and special health care needs report more sexualized behavior and victimization online than their peers without disabilities.
- Youth with disabilities are at greater risk of bullying and have fewer friend relationships than their peers.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses these issues by providing education on healthy relationships, consent, communication, and bodily autonomy.
A lack of comprehensive sex education can harm youth who are LGBTQ2S+.
- Youth who are LGBTQ2S+ benefit from being represented in sex education curricula:
- Most sex education curriculum is not inclusive or representative of LGBTQ2S+ identities and experiences.
- Because school-based sex education often does not meet their needs, youth who are LGBTQ2S+ are more likely to seek sexual health information online, and thus are more likely to come across misinformation.
- The majority of parents support discussion of sexual orientation in sex education classes.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses these issues by including positive representation of LGBTQ2S+ individuals, romantic relationships, and families.
- Non-inclusive curriculum hurts youth who are LGBTQ2S+:
- Sex education curriculum that overlooks or stigmatizes youth who are LGBTQ2S+ contributes to hostile school environments and harms the healthy sexual and mental development.
- Youth who are LGBTQ2S+ face high levels of discrimination at school and are more likely to miss school because of bullying or victimization.
- Ongoing experiences with stigma, exclusion, and harassment negatively impact the mental health of youth who are LGBTQ2S+.
- Comprehensive sex education provides inclusive curriculum and has been shown to improve understanding of gender diversity, lower rates of homophobia, and reduce homophobic bullying in schools.
- Youth who are LGBTQ2S+ have unique needs related to STI and pregnancy prevention:
- Youth who are LGBTQ2S+ are more likely than their heterosexual peers to report not learning about HIV/STIs in school.
- Lack of education on STI prevention leaves LGBTQ2S+ youth without the information they need to make informed decisions, leading to discrepancies in condom use between LGBTQ2S+ and heterosexual youth.
- Some LGBTQ2S+ populations carry a disproportionate burden of HIV and other STIs: these disparities begin in adolescence, when youth who are LGBTQ2S+ do not receive sex education that is relevant to them.
- Comprehensive sex education provides the knowledge and skills needed to make safe decisions about sexual behavior, including condom use and other forms of STI and HIV prevention.
- Youth who are LGBTQ2S+ are at disproportionate risk of bullying and dating violence:
- Youth who are LBGTQ2S+ or are questioning their sexual identity report higher rates of dating violence than their heterosexual peers.
- Youth who are LGBTQ2S+ or are questioning their sexual identity face higher prevalence of bullying than their heterosexual peers.
- Comprehensive sex education teaches youth healthy relationship and communication skills and is associated with decreases in dating violence and increases in bystander interventions.
A lack of comprehensive sex education can harm youth who are in foster care.
- Youth who are in foster care are at higher risk of abuse and violence:
- More than 70% of children in foster care have a documented history of child abuse and or neglect.
- More than 80% of children in foster care have been exposed to significant levels of violence, including domestic violence.
- Youth in foster care are racially diverse, with 23% of youth identifying as Black and 21% of identifying as Latinx, who will have similar experiences as those highlighted in earlier sections of this report.
- Removal is emotionally traumatizing for almost all children. Lack of consistent/stable placement with a responsive, nurturing caregiver can result in poor emotional regulation, impulsivity, and attachment problems.
- Comprehensive sex education addresses these issues by providing evidence-based, culturally appropriate information on healthy relationships, consent, communication, and bodily autonomy.
Sex education is often the first experience that youth have with understanding and discussing their gender and sexual health.
Youth deserve to a strong foundation of developmentally appropriate information about gender and sexuality, and how these things relate to their bodies, community, culture, society, mental health, and relationships with family, peers, and romantic partners.
Decades of data have demonstrated that comprehensive sex education programs are effective in reducing risk of STIs and unplanned pregnancy. These benefits are critical to public health. However, comprehensive sex education goes even further, by instilling youth with a broad range of knowledge and skills that are proven to support social-emotional learning, positive communication skills, and development of healthy relationships.
Last Updated
02/15/2024
Source
American Academy of Pediatrics