Subscribe to the Newspaper
E-edition
Publish your Stuff
Need Help? Click Here
Search: Site   Web
Print Story | E-Mail Story | Font Size
What is this?

Save & Share this Article

Students learn about consequences of teen pregnancy

Comments 0 | Recommend 0

The Sedalia Democrat

Teen pregnancy carries risks, not just medical ones, but personal ones as well.


Smith-Cotton High School students heard about those chances and consequences of teen pregnancy Thursday morning from Sedalia family practitioner Dr. Julie Cahill during a special assembly.


Cahill warned students that sex and pregnancy have health, financial and social consequences, and cited statistics to drive her point home.


“The daughters of teen mothers are more likely to be teen mothers themselves, 22 percent more likely,” she said. “The sons of teen mothers are 13 percent more likely to go to prison.”


Cahill said 25 percent of teen mothers finish high school.


“There’s no more fun, once you have a baby,” she said.


Only about 35 percent of teen fathers stay through the pregnancy, and that number drops off after the baby is born, she said.


Abstinence is the only sure way to avoid pregnancy or sexually transmitted diseases.


“Babies are a blessing, when you’re ready for them,” she said.


While teen pregnancy decreased nationally last year, she said, it increased in Missouri, which has a high teen birth rate compared to the national average.


Cahill said following the assembly she sees pregnant pediatric patients in her practice.


Student Council member Kami Wolf, who helped organize the awareness assembly, said Cahill was invited because female students could relate to her.


“Everybody was listening and she gave people a lot of good facts that people didn’t know,” Wolf said. “I think it really opened people’s eyes.”


Student Council member Jenny Swafford, who also helped organize Cahill’s presentation, said the group chose teen pregnancy for the annual awareness assembly because there have been pregnant students within the district.


“There were a couple of middle school students that were pregnant and we’ve had a lot come through Smith-Cotton as well,” she said.


Senior Cassie Bias, 18, said she knows of several.


“I know a lot of my friends that made bad choices and now they’re really stuck,” she said.


Sophomore Nakiya Allen, 16, said she thought the assembly was helpful.


“I thought it was actually kind of a good point. If people are going to go around and have sex at a young age, they should use protection” because an unintended pregnancy can affect students’ futures, she said.


Freshman Matt Kowalski, 15, said the assembly “was useful ... you make a mistake like that, you can’t take it back,” he said.


See archived 'News' stories »
 


Reader Comments
This a place to discuss and debate ideas that foster stronger communities. Comments that include personal attacks, profanity or are defamatory or harassing will be removed. Comments made to appear that they are made by someone other than the real author will be removed. We will block users who repeatedly violate our standards. Please review our user agreement (found under the register link above comments box), particularly the provisions under User Content and Interactive Areas of The Service. You are fully responsible for the content that you post. Please report comments that violate our policies to ensure prompt review.

Weather
Yellow Pages
Gas Prices
NWS Sedalia - Fair
63.0°F
Fair and 63.0°F
Winds Southwest at 13.8 MPH (12 KT)
Last Update: 2009-11-07 23:20:35

Updates every 30 minutes
ADVERTISEMENT 
Publish Your Stuff
ADVERTISEMENT 
Poll
Sedline
Opinion
Jennie Jaynes Stadium
Should Sedalia School District No. 200 replace the field at Jennie Jaynes Stadium with a turf field?
Yes, the expense is worthwhile to provide a decent all-weather playing surface
No, this year's rain was out of the ordinary — the current field is adequate
Enter The Code To Vote
 
Read Related Article
powered by
google
Search
        Search: Web    Site