Half of Vietnamese minors used to have sex:
poll
A caricature illustrating a lack of knowledge of gender and
sexual matters among Vietnamese young people. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Almost half of the 762 Vietnamese minors
participating in a poll said they once engaged in sexual intercourse while
they were in love, according to figures released Tuesday at a Ministry of
Education and Training workshop on gender and reproductive health in
About eight
percent revealed that they had sex even when they were not in love, as shown
in the survey conducted from August to October by the Hanoi-based Center for
Creative Initiatives in Health and Population (CCIHP).
One-third of the
young people said they did not take any safe sex precautions when they were
in a relationship, simply because they did not see any risks.
Among the other
two-thirds, male respondents named money, emergency numbers, familiar venues,
and condoms as the top safety measures to protect themselves whereas the
females considered the third option the number-one safety practice, followed
by a sound understanding of their partners.
However, only
one-tenth of the female participants brought condoms to a rendezvous while
one-third of their partners did so.
None of the
respondents who are 15 or younger had any previous knowledge of sex while
nearly one-third of the 16-17-year-olds disclosed they had sex before.
“This indicates an
urgent demand for sex education for children aged 15 and under,” Pham Vu
Thien, CCIHP director, said.
Thien added that
the surveyed females did very little to safeguard themselves since they
thought there was no risk with their partners.
“All the
participants admitted that their schools and parents had not educated them on
any precautionary methods,” he revealed.
Adolescents are
easily thrown in the dark about sex education as parents tend to avoid
discussing sexual issues with them, the director said.
Obedient children at risk
Parents usually
think that their children are always “obedient and knowledgeable” so they
should be immune to risks, Thien said.
The most common
guidance parents often give their children is “warning” rather than detailed
information on advisable responses to insecure situations, he added.
Dr. Nguyen Thu
Giang, deputy director of a Hanoi-based non-governmental health institute,
said that those regarded as “meek and mild” are most likely to be subject to
sexual abuse or unprotected sex.
Zero
understanding
A Hanoi junior college student said that his female classmates once felt terrified and embarrassed when one of them was “bleeding.” “The boys were laughing then,” he said. Another college student admitted at a recent seminar on sex education that she did not know anything about sex and sexually transmitted diseases until her second year.
“More often than
not, overprotective families deprive the children of contact with and the
ability to respond to real scenarios,” Giang said.
Under-par sex education
Workshop delegates
said that schools now provide sex education that is too academic while their
students need realistic information.
Tran Thi Hoa, a
doctor, complained that education on sexual and reproductive heath is under
par in Vietnamese schools.
“More open content
would help improve the situation,” she said. “Instructors should engender
trust in children so that they are willing to speak and share sensitive
issues with them.”
Dr. Giang said
that adolescents know a lot about sex but they do not have much understanding
of sexual health.
They are even
ignorant about such basics as menstrual hygiene, mate selection, indecent
clothes, forms of sexual abuse, and abuse prevention, she elaborated.
TUOI TRE News
|
Thứ Sáu, 7 tháng 12, 2012
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