A drastic fall in the number of teenage pregnancies is partly the result of youngsters spending much of their time on Facebook and other social media, experts said yesterday.
Fewer
than 30,000 babies were born to girls under 20 in England and Wales
last year, official figures showed – down from more than 45,000 in 2006.
The total is now at its lowest since 1951.
The
figures, from the Office for National Statistics, also showed the
average age of a new mother was 30, up from 29.8 in 2012. It is the
oldest age of motherhood since such calculations were first made in
1938, and ONS officials said it was certainly the highest ever.
The
spectacular fall in teenage pregnancy does not appear to be connected
to Labour’s Teenage Pregnancy Strategy, which concentrated on more sex
education and the distribution of condoms. The strategy was halted in
2010 but numbers of babies born to teenagers have dropped by more than a
quarter since then.
Analysts
suggest that one of the biggest changes in recent years is the rise in
social media, which means teenagers are interacting on their phones and
computers rather than mixing out on the streets – where they are more
likely to indulge in underage sex.
Professor
David Paton of Nottingham University said the rise in numbers of girls
going into higher education and increasing influence of aspirational
immigrant families who discourage single motherhood has also had an
impact, as has the morning after pill and new and effective long-term
contraception through injections or implants. However, he added:
‘Facebook use amongst teenagers was just getting off the ground in a
significant way in 2007.
It is hard to deny that social networking
applications have changed the way teenagers interact in fundamental
ways.
The
rise among older mothers has also that meant for the first time, more
babies were born in 2013 to women over 40 than teenage girls.
Culled From Dailymail
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