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Sex lessons in primary school 'would cut teen pregnancies'



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Published Date: 10 July 2008
LESSONS about sex and relationships should start in primary school to try to tackle sexually transmitted infections and teenage pregnancies, doctors said yesterday.
Emily Finnigan, from the BMA's southern division, said sex and relationships played a big part in people living a healthy life.

"I feel it is preposterous that we do not adequately prepare our young people for this," she said. "Sex education need
s to be comprehensive, covering everything from relationships to contraception and STIs."

She said starting in primary school was considered controversial, but it was necessary.

However, Dr Shreelata Datta, from the BMA's junior doctors' committee, said: "Are we really calling for children as young as the age of four to have sex education as part of their curriculum, alongside the alphabet?"

Despite such concerns, doctors narrowly backed the idea of sex education in primary schools with 54.6 per cent in favour.

A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: "While sex education is not a formal part of the early years curriculum, a curriculum framework for children aged three to five places emotional, personal and social development at the centre of children's development and learning."

Meanwhile, the conference heard calls for more guidance for doctors on complementary therapies, such as homeopathy and reflexology.

The BMA backed a move to ensure such therapies were properly regulated, and to ask the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence to examine homeopathy and recommend whether it should still be funded by the NHS.





The full article contains 251 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 09 July 2008 9:47 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Pregnancy and birth
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 10/07/2008 01:23:19

Your Plan is,..'Two-Fold'!

You say,.."Teach Sex Education"!

And then in later years, give them the,..

'Green Light' to have Sex!

All very sensible, I must Say!,....'NOT'!

You are a,..'Barrel of Comedians'!

"Whys That",?

Your the ones that are meant to know, NOT ME!

"Please Charles,..'Pray Tell'"

Tell you all the rest later, unless 'of-course' you can work it out for yourselves!
2

Phil C,

10/07/2008 07:31:14
I am totally in favour of Relationship lessons in primary schools. These should teach children to respect each other, respect adults and respect their bodies.

Why the word Sex has to appear in these is beyond me though. Sex is part of grown-up relationships and children should have knowledge of it, not least to be made aware of improper advances and the consequences of 'mistakes'. But they do do need to have all the mechanics and baggage of it foisted on them by the nanny state.

Sex should be an innocent thing and should be discussed alongside relationships and respect, not put up as the emphasis of any teaching.
3

Phil C,

10/07/2008 07:33:04
#2 Sorry, "but they do NOT need to have all the mechanics....."
4

M.Corleone,

2nd Vatican State...... Coatbridge 10/07/2008 09:02:07
This is nonsense, they are taking away the childhood of weans for f sake; gie them a chance to grow up
5

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 10/07/2008 09:20:37

M.Corleone, ~4,

...........'Well-Said!'.........
6

Cauchy Riemann,

Wales 10/07/2008 09:44:15
The desire to bring forms of sex education to 4 year olds is a latent form of paedophilia. Young children should be allowed to be young children, not imposed on by the lunatic brigade who are fixated by these type of things.

No wonder parents are opting out of the state system if these ideas are taken seriously.
7

Calum Crubag,

10/07/2008 09:57:47
It is not doctors or schools who steal children's childhoods - it's parents influenced by the media. Why should primary children have 'graduations'? hy do 11 and 12 y.o. girls dress like 16?

Children should be taught about relationships and certainly in later years, sex should be part of it though the legal age should be made clear as well as the consequences of teenage sex/ pregnacies.

Lastly, who should we trust - doctors, health and education professionals or the various churches? If anyone can point to a church or bible that encourages healthy and rational attitudes to our bodies then i'm waiting to see it. Certainly, the Christian Bible encourages mutilation of boys' genitals - God almost killed Moses for not circumcising his son - this practise still continues. As to 'moral guidance' and superiority, the Catholic church is hardly a role model. It can't even control it's own 'celibate' priests.
8

Horrible Cankers at the Cyber Shebeen,

10/07/2008 10:41:45
Ten year old maybe but not below that....before kids go to secondary school and mix with older children yes but 5 years of age is waaaaay to soon!
9

Boy Wonder,

10/07/2008 11:27:32
Childhood is way too short already! A resounding NO to this idiotic suggestion.
10

saneatheist,

Bixter 10/07/2008 15:42:45
<(The BMA backed a move to ensure such therapies were properly regulated, and to ask the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence to examine homeopathy and recommend whether it should still be funded by the NHS.>)

Surprised nobody has commented on the last paragraph, it's an absolute scandal that Homeopathy is in any way funded by the NHS, what will they be funding next? Witchcraft and astrology, the power of prayer maybe?.
11

Phil C,

10/07/2008 19:42:02
#10 selfishatheist

Bee in the bonnet? Homeopathy helps many thousands of people and has demonstrable results. Witchcraft and astrology are a bit alien but some folk enjoy it. The power of prayer costs nothing and is vitally important to millions of people. Whether you approve or not is of no consequence. You are small minded and irrelevant. Let people live their own lives and try to get a less sour, less bitter, less selfish view on life!
12

,

10/07/2008 22:53:23
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
13

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10/02/2009 17:53:10
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:

 

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