February 16, 2017

Is It Time For More Comprehensive Sex Education In Indiana?

Original story from   IPBS-RJC

Article origination IPBS-RJC
Teachers in Indiana are expected to teach abstinence and are discouraged from teaching safe sex lessons. - Jill Sheridan/IPB

Teachers in Indiana are expected to teach abstinence and are discouraged from teaching safe sex lessons.

Jill Sheridan/IPB

A national report from the Population Institute recently gave Indiana a failing grade for reproductive rights. It measures reproductive health subjects including access to contraception, insurance coverage and abortion restrictions. When it comes to prevention, including sexual education, Indiana received a zero.

Half of all pregnancies in the state are unintended, and preventing unwanted pregnancies often starts with education.

Ryan Tucker has been teaching health at Lebanon High School in north central Indiana, for more than 10 years.

“You hear the phrase knowledge is power, information is power,” says Tucker. “So why not give them as much as we can and hope they can make more mature responsible decisions?”

According to the most recent Youth Risk Assessment Survey, 41 percent of Indiana teens are sexually active. But under current state standards, Tucker is not allowed to teach about contraception.

“We’re not allowed to design our lesson to talk about safe sex practice, but students are allowed to ask me questions and I can give appropriate information for those questions,” Tucker says.

The federal government currently supports this type of sexual education curriculum and gives money to states that teach abstinence, more commonly referred to now as sexual risk avoidance.

And schools in Indiana are required to teach this curriculum and stay away from topics like safe sex and sexually transmitted diseases, except for HIV/AIDS.

There is a bill in this session to change this. Sen. Jean Leising (R-Oldenburg) says it’s time for an update.

“Our Department of [Education] has not revised health curriculum, academic standards since 2010 and for me that seems like light years away in the way our society has changed,” Leising says.

A bill filed this session aims for a more comprehensive health education program that would be more frank about preventing pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.  Leising thinks young adults should have access to this information.

“It’s wrong for us, when we have that medical data not to share it with young people and still express a conservative view,” says Leising. “I’m not advocating that kids do drugs and have sex, but that there are a lot of risks when you participate in that behavior.”

Indiana schools districts often supplement their sex education with help from nonprofits that teach teens to avoid sexual activity by suggesting they wait.  Creating Positive Relationships is one of these organizations that visits high schools in Indiana.

Director Karyn Mitchell says teen pregnancy is nothing new.

“You know 100 years ago we were talking about this,” says Mitchell. “A girl is less likely to graduate, more likely to live in poverty. We still haven’t figured out what to do with that.”

Their program aims to give young people tools to have healthy relationships without sex.

“Studies have shown too that schools that pass out condoms see a higher percentage of kids who are sexually active,” Mitchell says.

Studies are actually conflicting on this issue, but there is some evidence that safer sex programs help to reduce sexually transmitted disease and teen pregnancy.

Health care education and training executive director, Abby Hunt works to promote reproductive health in Indiana. She says there are things that teens need to know about safe sex.

“They need to know if they decide to become sexually active how to not become pregnant or cause a pregnancy, so they need to know about contraception, how to access that,” says Hunt.

Hunt says common ground about health sexual education can be achieved.

“When you really get into communities and you’re willing to have an open conversation about this work, usually you can find a place where everybody agrees.” Hunt explains.

Leising hopes everyone can agree the state needs updated health standards and says her proposal is simple.

“My whole thing is to try and keep them healthy, healthy for the rest of their life,” says Leising.

The bill has not had a hearing in the Senate.

Support independent journalism today. You rely on WFYI to stay informed, and we depend on you to make our work possible. Donate to power our nonprofit reporting today. Give now.

 

Related News

Feds require Indiana to test its milk for bird flu
Why do independent grocery stores struggle in Indiana?
Indiana not among ten worst infant mortality rates in the country for the first time since 2019