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Thread: this isn't football or sports related....

  1. #1
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    Default this isn't football or sports related....

    Maine School to Offer Contraceptives

    By JERRY HARKAVY – Oct 18, 2007
    PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — School officials on Thursday defended a decision to allow children as young as 11 to obtain birth-control pills at a middle-school health center, saying the new policy is aimed at a tiny number of sexually active students.
    King Middle School will become the first middle school in Maine, and apparently one of only a few in the nation, to make a full range of contraception available, including birth-control pills and patches.
    Students would need parental permission to use the city-run health center in the school, but they wouldn't have to tell them they were seeking birth control.
    "People I associate with are looking at me like, are you guys crazy? Is this really going to happen in Portland?" said school committee Chairman John Coyne, who opposed the new policy in the 7-2 vote by the Portland School Committee on Wednesday night.
    There are no national figures on how many middle schools provide such services. Most middle schoolers range in age from 11 to 13.
    "It's very rare that middle schools do this," said Divya Mohan, a spokeswoman for the National Assembly on School-Based Health Care.
    This week, the health center asked the committee to make birth-control pills available to high school-aged students who were still in middle school and unable to access the contraception available at the high school, said Portland School Committee member Robert O'Brien.
    School officials said five of the school's 510 students would have qualified for the birth control under the program last year.
    O'Brien, whose district includes King Middle School, said the notion that young children can now easily get birth-control pills is flat wrong.
    "They don't just have a giant punch bowl full of pills," he said,
    The birth control will be given out only after extensive counseling, and no prepubescent children will get it, O'Brien said.
    But Coyne said a physically mature, savvy 11-year-old could get the birth control once the permission slip to use the center is signed.
    "I think she could navigate the system," he said.
    Portland's three middle schools had seven pregnancies in the last five years, said Douglas Gardner, director of Portland's Health and Human Services Department. He said early reports of 17 pregnancies during the last four years were erroneous.
    The King Middle School is among Portland's most diverse schools, with 31 languages spoken there and 28 percent of its students foreign-born. The school, located on the same peninsula as downtown Portland, draws from the islands in Casco Bay, wealthier neighborhoods overlooking the bay, and low-income triple deckers.
    Fifty-four percent of the students are part of the federal free lunch program, which is an indicator of poverty.
    Principal Michael McCarthy said the school had just one pregnancy last year, but students were reporting they were sexually active. The center has dispensed condoms since 2000, but because it could not prescribe birth-control pills, nurses referred the students to Planned Parenthood or Maine Medical Center.
    "When they followed up, they found that in many cases, the kids weren't doing that," McCarthy said.
    The policy raises new legal concerns.
    Sex with a nonspousal minor under 14 is considered gross sexual assault in Maine, and officials said it was unclear whether nurses at the health center would be required to report such activities.
    "If we're required to report anything that we think is illegal, we certainly will do that," said Gardner, who said health centers already comply with state law and report cases in which child abuse or sex abuse are suspected.
    Gov. John Baldacci said he had reservations about the program and was trying to learn more.
    "I appreciate local officials trying to address a need in a medically appropriate way, but these are children," he said in an interview with the AP. "An appropriate balance must be struck addressing the troubling situation that a small number of students find themselves in and recognizing the important role that parents and other family should play."
    McCarthy, the principal, said he sympathizes with those who have reservations about the program.
    "I think it makes people nervous to think middle school students are having sex. Frankly, it makes me nervous. But there's a small population out there that needs protection," he said.
    Carol Schiller, the mother of a boy and girl who graduated from King, said she was "elated" at the committee's vote. She said critics shocked that 11-year-olds have sex should "get over it."
    "It's much more important that we reach out to these kids and get them the tools they need to stay safe, stay in school and get an education," she said.
    Michael Heath, executive director of the Christian Civic League of Maine, said he was concerned that young children would have access to any form of birth control, with adults playing a supportive role.
    "It's at best troubling, at worst an outrage," he said.
    ___
    Associated Press Writer Jay Lindsay contributed to this report from Boston.
    (This version CORRECTS that Portland's three middle schools reported seven pregnancies, not 17.)
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

  2. #2
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    this being sad because just several years ago when i was in middle school the farthest thing on my mind was birth control and safe sex. geez, i was so excited on holding hands even kissing.
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

  3. #3
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    Canada needs one.
    <a href=http://img218.imageshack.us/img218/5893/dthomassp2.jpg target=_blank>http://img218.imageshack.us/img218/5893/dthomassp2.jpg</a>

    Official thread killer I have heard.

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    Quote Originally Posted by anaeelbackwards View Post
    this being sad because just several years ago when i was in middle school the farthest thing on my mind was birth control and safe sex. geez, i was so excited on holding hands even kissing.
    This is scary to me. I have a four-year-old daughter that already is trying to be as independent as she possibly can and a five-month-old daughter. I guess I have to educate them both as best I can because they're going to do what they want to do regardless of what I do.

    I do think it's good that they are trying to educate and prevent pre-teen and teenage pregnancy.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by anaeelbackwards View Post
    this being sad because just several years ago when i was in middle school the farthest thing on my mind was birth control and safe sex. geez, i was so excited on holding hands even kissing.
    Pervasive pornography has cheapened the act of intercourse.

    Being so easily available to people of all ages, has changed society people.

    There is no going back now.

    The world has changed and all of your daughters will wind up on the pole!

    j/k about the last part!

    http://arrowheadjunkies.com/pictures/PhotoShop/sig_pics/NFL_Players/kansas_city_chiefs/tyson.jackson/062009/tyson.jackson.500.png

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by hermhater View Post
    Pervasive pornography has cheapened the act of intercourse.

    Being so easily available to people of all ages, has changed society people.

    There is no going back now.

    The world has changed and all of your daughters will wind up on the pole!

    j/k about the last part!

    Now that's even scarier...

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by royalswin100games View Post
    Now that's even scarier...
    agreed. when i heard about this, i recalled my sister who is in 9th grade, told me a friend of hers who is in 8th grade was pregnant. and girls gossip, she told me that a lot of the girls in her grade and the grade lower were sexually active. it really opened my eyes and had me worried and concerned....
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by royalswin100games View Post
    Now that's even scarier...
    When you ask for a bed time story, don't always expect a happy ending!

    http://arrowheadjunkies.com/pictures/PhotoShop/sig_pics/NFL_Players/kansas_city_chiefs/tyson.jackson/062009/tyson.jackson.500.png

  9. #9
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    Students would need parental permission to use the city-run health center in the school, but they wouldn't have to tell them they were seeking birth control.
    I personally got a problem with this, I never think it's a good thing to encourage adolescent and pre-adolescents to to be anything less then forthcoming with their parents.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Chiefster View Post
    I personally got a problem with this, I never think it's a good thing to encourage adolescent and pre-adolescents to to be anything less then forthcoming with their parents.
    The youngsters are running things nowadays!

    We may think we are in charge, but technology has made them very powerful with the Force!
    http://arrowheadjunkies.com/pictures/PhotoShop/sig_pics/NFL_Players/kansas_city_chiefs/tyson.jackson/062009/tyson.jackson.500.png

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