"'We'd teach them some skills one week, and they'd come back the next week bubbling over with excitement that they'd talked with their teen about relationships, love, or sex... their teen had actually engaged in a real conversation with them, or role-played a topic like how to say no to unwanted sexual advances,' the British Medical Journal quoted Mark Schuster, the study's lead researcher, as saying."The programs, which took place during lunch hour, did not interfere with normal workday activities. Previous studies have found that adolescents who talk to their parents about sexual health are more likely to delay sexual activity, use contraception and have fewer partners. Source: New Kerala (India)
Labels: sex, communication
Posted By: Aspen Education Group







