Politics Women and girls as young as 13 years old can now get birth control online in North Carolina

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SlyPokerDog

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CHARLOTTE, NC -- Women and girls as young as 13 years old can now get birth control online in North Carolina, without going to the doctor or requiring parental consent.

The birth control delivery app, Nurx, was recently launched in our state and is already causing controversy.

“We just have so much evidence that young people are having sex whether we want them to or not,” said Dr. Jessica Knox, medical director for Nurx.

“We have younger patients who haven't been able to access birth control otherwise because their parents aren't comfortable talking about birth control with them," Dr. Knox said. "So they won't take them to the doctor’s office.”

It doesn’t cost anything to use, you just answer a few medical questions inside the app.

http://www.whas11.com/news/health/n...trol-online-without-parents-knowing/469542301
 
...pretty amazing for a state in the "Bible Belt" that won't allow unisex bathrooms! :dunno:
 
CHARLOTTE, NC -- Women and girls as young as 13 years old can now get birth control online in North Carolina, without going to the doctor or requiring parental consent.

The birth control delivery app, Nurx, was recently launched in our state and is already causing controversy.

“We just have so much evidence that young people are having sex whether we want them to or not,” said Dr. Jessica Knox, medical director for Nurx.

“We have younger patients who haven't been able to access birth control otherwise because their parents aren't comfortable talking about birth control with them," Dr. Knox said. "So they won't take them to the doctor’s office.”

It doesn’t cost anything to use, you just answer a few medical questions inside the app.

http://www.whas11.com/news/health/n...trol-online-without-parents-knowing/469542301
Many lion hearted studs will move to NC.
 
Good development. Hopefully services like this end up available in every state.
 
Good. Maybe they can put a dent in this:

While the teen pregnancy rate has been declining overall over the past two decades, rates of teen pregnancy and birth can vary wildly from state to state within the United States. However, there seems to be a connection between sex education (or the lack thereof) and high rates of teen pregnancy and parenthood.

THE DATA
A recent report by the Guttmacher Institute compiled teenage pregnancy statistics in the United States gathered state by state in 2010.

Based on available data, below are listings of states ranked by pregnancy and birth rates.

States with the high rates of pregnancy among women age 15-19 in ranked order*:
  1. New Mexico
  2. Mississippi
  3. Texas
  4. Arkansas
  5. Louisiana
  6. Oklahoma
  7. Nevada
  8. Delaware
  9. South Carolina
  10. Hawaii
In 2010, New Mexico had the highest teenage pregnancy rate (80 pregnancies per 1,000 women); the next highest rates were in Mississippi (76), Texas (73), Arkansas (73), Louisiana (69) and Oklahoma (69). The lowest rates were in New Hampshire (28), Vermont (32), Minnesota (36), Massachusetts (37) and Maine (37).

States ranked by rates of live births among women age 15-19*:
  1. Mississippi
  2. New Mexico
  3. Arkansas
  4. Texas
  5. Oklahoma
  6. Louisiana
  7. Kentucky
  8. West Virginia
  9. Alabama
  10. Tennessee
In 2010, the teenage birthrate was highest in Mississippi (55 per 1,000 in 2010), and the next highest rates were in New Mexico (53), Arkansas (53), Texas (52) and Oklahoma (50).

The lowest rates were in New Hampshire (16), Massachusetts (17), Vermont (18), Connecticut (19) and New Jersey (20).

WHAT DOES THIS DATA MEAN?
For one, there seems to be an ironic correlation between states with conservative politics around sex education and contraception and high rates of teen pregnancy and birth.
Some research suggests that "U.S. states whose residents have more conservative religious beliefs on average tend to have higher rates of teenagers giving birth. The relationship could be due to the fact that communities with such religious beliefs (a literal interpretation of the Bible, for instance) may frown upon contraception ... If that same culture isn't successfully discouraging teen sex, the pregnancy and birth rates rise."

Furthermore, teen pregnancy and birth rates are often higher in rural areas rather than more urban areas. Think Progress reports "While teens across the country have largely been having less sex and using more contraception, teens in rural areas have actually been having more sex and using birth control less frequently. It’s not clear why that’s the case, but it could partly be because teens in rural areas still lack access to a range of comprehensive contraceptive services. There just aren’t as many sexual health resources in rural counties, where teens may have to travel farther to the nearest women’s health clinic. And deeply rooted attitudes about sex — including school districts that continue to cling to abstinence-only health curricula that don’t give teens enough information about methods to prevent pregnancy — may also play a role.

Urban school districts, particularly in New York City, have made significant advances in expanding teens’ access to sexual education and resources, but there often aren’t similar pushes in rural places."

Ultimately, the data underscores that it is not simply because teens are engaging in risky behaviors, such as having unprotected sex. They are also engaging in sexual activity while being un- or under-informed and while lacking access to contraception and family planning services.

CONSEQUENCES OF TEEN PARENTHOOD
Having a child young often incites problematic life outcomes for teen mothers. For example, just 38% of women who have a child before age 20 finish high school. Because many teen mothers drop out of school to parent full-time support around their education is crucial. While supportive social infrastructure to aid young parents is key, but often missing, particularly in states with large percentages of teen pregnancies.

One small way to help is to start a Babysitters Club so they young mothers can take GED classes and continue their educations.

As the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy argues "by preventing teen and unplanned pregnancy, we can significantly improve other serious social problems including poverty (especially child poverty), child abuse and neglect, father-absence, low birth weight, school failure, and poor preparation for the workforce." However, until we tackle the large infrastructural issues around teen parenthood, the issue seems unlikely to go away anytime soon.
 
If you're old enough to get pregnant, you're old enough to get birth control.
And if youre old enough to get pregnant, youre old enough to pay for your own abortion and not have taxpayers do it for you
 
dviss, one factor could be the antiabortion laws that have resulted in closing of dozens of Planned Parenthood clinics. Birth control and education are among their major projects (abortion 3%) so when antiabortion laws force them to close, women, especially young, poor, and rural, have far fewer resources.
 
dviss, one factor could be the antiabortion laws that have resulted in closing of dozens of Planned Parenthood clinics. Birth control and education are among their major projects (abortion 3%) so when antiabortion laws force them to close, women, especially young, poor, and rural, have far fewer resources.

This is the exact reason.
 
dviss, one factor could be the antiabortion laws that have resulted in closing of dozens of Planned Parenthood clinics. Birth control and education are among their major projects (abortion 3%) so when antiabortion laws force them to close, women, especially young, poor, and rural, have far fewer resources.

Besides New Mexico, and Delaware you see what those states have in common. Same as the states with the lowest teen pregnancy.
 
And if youre old enough to get pregnant, youre old enough to pay for your own abortion and not have taxpayers do it for you

And if you are old enough to pay for it, you are old enough to get a job in the coal mines 16 hours/day so you have money to pay for it.

We must abolish the child labor laws.

barfo
 
My opinion, I think it's a good thing. Whether people like to agree or not there is an over population issue in the world and it doesn't help when dumb people start making babies super early. Don't exactly know what the hormones would be doing to a 13 year old but it's better than shitty parents raising another child who will also end up shitty
 
North Carolina sure seems to spend an inordinate amount of time worrying about other peoples sex lives and preferences. Kinky...........
 
North Carolina sure seems to spend an inordinate amount of time worrying about other peoples sex lives and preferences. Kinky...........

The old joke is that Republicans want government out of the economy and into people's bedrooms, while Democrats want government out of people's bedrooms and in the economy.
 

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