Thousands of teenage girls in Beijing have abortions
each year, according to teenage sex clinics.
Sources with Beijing Tian'an Hospital of Traditional
Chinese Medicine, the first in the capital to open a hotline for
pregnant teenagers, said more than 100 teenage girls received
abortions during the first three months of the year.
Of nearly 5,000 phone calls from teenagers, seven to
eight percent are from unmarried girls asking about abortion. The
proportion was only about five percent last year, said Deng Jun, a
doctor with the teenager counseling service of Beijing No. 2
Hospital.
The total number of teenage abortions in the capital
is not known.
"Girls who have abortions are considerably younger.
Most of them are middle school students aged 14 to 15," said Deng,
adding the youngest patient to come for an abortion was a
13-year-old and some girls had abortions many times.
"Two years ago, teenage pregnancy mainly happened to
college and high school students," he said.
The number of abortions peaks during the Spring
Festival, May Day or National Day holidays and in the final term of
the academic year, Deng said, adding that sex education at school
and in the family is wholly inadequate with young people nowadays
having their first sexual experiences at a much earlier
age.
Sex education has always been a low priority in
schools, and parents are often reluctant to talk about the
still-taboo issue.
A survey conducted by Professor Huo Jinzhi from the
medical school of Suzhou University showed 4.6 percent of middle
school students had had sex compared with 4.2 percent in high
schools.
In September 2004, the country for the first time
included sex and reproduction knowledge in the formal school
curriculum.
(Xinhua News Agency April 28, 2007)
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