SlutLiberationFront
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- Joined
- May 6, 2021
- Posts
- 11,157
View: https://www.reddit.com/r/IncelTear/comments/qdj8yi/its_not_normal_its_on_a_show_called_my/
The delusion... the fucking delusion... yeah, here they come with the holy number 18 again, this time to say girls lose their virginity at age 18 on average. Really, fucking really?
Let's take a look at it, shall we?
Important info on Cucknited States:
SEXUAL INTERCOURSE
- Partnered sexual activity may include a range of behaviors. In 2015–2017, 40% of adolescents aged 15–19 reported ever having had penile-vaginal intercourse (commonly referred to as “sexual intercourse”), 45% had had oral sex with a different-sex partner and 9% reported ever having had anal sex with a different-sex partner.6
- Overall, the share of 15–19-year-olds that has had sexual intercourse has remained steady in recent years.7 But among the narrower population of high school students, there was a decline in 2013–2017 in the proportion that had ever had sexual intercourse—from 47% to 40%.8
- The proportion of young people who have had sexual intercourse increases rapidly as they age through adolescence. In 2013, about one in five 15-year-olds and two-thirds of 18-year-olds reported having had sex (Figure 1).9
- Among adolescents aged 15–19 in 2015–2017 who had had penile-vaginal sex, 75% of females and 48% of males reported that their first intercourse was with a steady partner.6
- As of 2015–2017, among young people aged 18–24 who have had penile-vaginal sex, 71% of men described their first sexual experience as wanted, as opposed to unwanted (4%) or that they had mixed feelings (25%). One-half of young women said they had mixed feelings (51%), while 45% said first sex was wanted and 4% said it was unwanted.6
- Among young people aged 18–24 in 2015–2017, 13% of females and 5% of males reported that they had ever been forced to have vaginal sex.6
Further down:
- Even when parental consent is not required for contraceptive services, concerns about confidentiality may limit adolescents’ access to or use of contraceptive or other reproductive health services. Among females aged 15–17 who had ever had sex in 2013–2015, those who reported concerns about confidentiality were significantly less likely to have received a contraceptive service in the previous year than those who did not have these concerns.26
- In 2011–2015, 31% of females aged 15–17 and 56% of those aged 18–25 reported having received contraceptive services in the last year; about one-quarter of both age-groups had received this care from publicly funded clinics and the rest from private health care providers.27
- Nearly one million women younger than age 20 received contraceptive services from publicly supported family planning centers in 2014. These services helped adolescents to prevent 232,000 pregnancies that they wanted to postpone or avoid.28
PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF HIV AND OTHER STIS AND RELATED SERVICES
- All 50 states and DC explicitly allow minors to consent to STI services without parental involvement. Thirty-two states explicitly allow minors to consent to HIV testing and treatment.29
- Young people aged 13–24 accounted for about 21% of all new HIV diagnoses in the United States in 2016. Young black and Hispanic gay, bisexual or other men who have sex with men are disproportionately affected.30
- Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a daily pill that protects against HIV, gained FDA approval for use among adolescents in May 2018.31
- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) report that young people aged 15–24 account for half of the 20 million new cases of STIs in the United States annually, which reflects biological differences as well as likely age-based disparities in accessing preventive information and services.32
- Chlamydia accounts for nearly 20% of all STI diagnoses each year among 15–24-year-olds. Genital herpes, gonorrhea and trichomoniasis together account for about 11% of diagnoses. HIV, syphilis and hepatitis B are estimated to account for fewer than 1% of diagnoses.33
- Two-thirds of STIs diagnosed among 15–24-year-olds each year are human papillomavirus (HPV) infections.33 These infections are often asymptomatic and generally harmless but, if left undetected and untreated, can lead to cervical and other cancers.34
- HPV vaccinations are currently available to prevent the types of infections most likely to lead to cervical cancer and are recommended by the CDC for all adolescents starting at age 11.35
- HPV vaccination coverage has been improving and as of 2017, 69% of females and 63% of males aged 13–17 had received one or more doses of the vaccine.36
- Numerous studies have confirmed that increases in HPV vaccinations result in significant declines in HPV infections and related negative health outcomes.37
All this can be found here: https://www.guttmacher.org/fact-sheet/american-teens-sexual-and-reproductive-health
Over Half of U.S. Teens Have Had Sexual Intercourse by Age 18, New Report Shows
National Center for Health Statistics
www.cdc.gov
This link down here is a must-read content and offers A TON of insight into the subject and how many people aged below 18 have had sex, including of course, females, otherwise the study wouldn't be complete. Again, it is a must-read content.
Sexual Activity and Contraceptive Use Among Teenagers in the United States, 2011–2015pdf icon
National Health Statistics Report No. 104
An estimated 55% of male and female teens have had sexual intercourse by age 18 and approximately 80% of teens used some form of contraception at first sex, according to a new report by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
The report, “Sexual Activity and Contraceptive Use Among Teenagers in the United States: 2011-2015,” features the most recent data from the National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG), conducted by NCHS, and compares the new data to past NSFG data. The data represent all teens in the U.S. and were derived from interviews with 4,134 male and female teens 15-19 years of age over the period 2011 through 2015.
The report documented the following findings:
- Among teen females aged 15-19, 42% had ever had sex, and among teen males, the percent was 44%.
- These percentages have gradually declined since 1988 when 51% of female and 60% of male teens had ever had sex.
- In 2011-2015, nearly 3 in 10 teens (30% of female teens and 29% of male teens) had sexual intercourse at least once in the past three months.
- A small percentage of teens had their first sexual intercourse with someone they had “just met” (female teens: 2%; male teens: 7%), whereas the majority had a first partner with whom they were “going steady” (female teens: 74%; male teens: 51%).
- Virtually all sexually experienced female teens had used some method of contraception, and this increased from 98% of female teens in 2002 to 99% in 2011-2015. This level has been sustained since the earliest published data in this series, in 1995, when it was 96%.
- The most commonly used method among teens in 2011-2015 remained the condom (reported by 97% of teen females), followed by withdrawal (60% ) and the pill (56%).
- Among those teens who had not yet had sex, the most common reasons for abstaining were: “it was against religion or morals,” “haven’t found the right person yet,” and “don’t want to get (a female) pregnant.”
Sucks to be IT and keep boasting on things they are so eager about but don't know shit about. Negative IQ cuckddit strikes again with their bullshit.
That's it for today, folks.
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