Use of morning-after pill increases as more than one in five sexually active teen girls has taken the contraception
- More than one in five sexually active teen girls has used the morning-after pill, a report released on Wednesday said
- It's an increase from a decade earlier, when the rate was one in 12
- In the last decade, the morning-after pill has become available to teens, who can now all buy it without a prescription
- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention survey showed little recent change in other types of birth control used by teen girls
More than one in five sexually active teen girls have used the morning-after pill - a dramatic increase that likely reflects that it's easier now for teens to buy the emergency contraceptive.
A report released on Wednesday shows teen use of the morning-after pill rose steadily from a decade earlier, when it was one in 12. Now, all teens can buy it without a prescription.
The finding comes from a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention survey that's considered the government's best source of information on teen sex and contraception use.
The report showed little recent change in most other types of birth control used by teen girls who have had sex.
More than one in five sexually active teen girls have used the morning-after pill. This number has dramatically increased from a decade earlier, when it was one in 12 (file photo)
Almost all said they said they've used condoms at some point, and more than half have used the pill.
There was little change in most other types of birth control used by teen girls who have had sex, as more than have have used the pill (file photo)
The fact that more teen girls bought the morning-after pill after it became more accessible is a sign that 'teens, like adults, often are not very good at contraception,' said Bill Albert, chief program officer for the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy.
'In the battle between sex and sex with contraception, sex often wins,' he said.
The morning-after pill contains a higher dose of the female hormone progestin than is in regular birth control pills.
It can cut the chances of pregnancy by nearly 90 per cent if taken within 72 hours of unprotected sex.
Starting in 2006, teens 18 and older could buy it over the counter; age limits were lifted two years ago. It typically costs $35 to $50.
The CDC report is based on interviews with about 2,000 people, ages 15 to 19 from 2011 to 2013. One of the report's main findings has been the proportion of teens who said they've had sex.
Those figures steadily fell from the late 1980s until the early 2000s - a decrease commonly attributed to improved sex education and greater concern by teens about AIDS and other sexually spread diseases.
Experts believe a decline in teen sexual activity and better contraception use have driven an astounding drop in teen birth rates since 1991.
But the decrease in teen sex leveled off about a decade ago, at about 45 percent for both boys and girls, and there was no change in the latest report. In 1988, it was 60 percent for boys and 51 percent for girls.
It's hard to say why the decline leveled off, but there will always be a sizable proportion of teens who have sex, Albert said.
'Are we likely to get to 30 percent? Probably not,' he said.
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