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Summary: Religious Views and Parental
Attitudes Reduce Adolescent Sex
Religion reduces the likelihood of adolescents engaging in early sex
by shaping their attitudes and beliefs about sexual activity.
Parents’ attitudes toward sex also influence their teens’ own
attitudes toward sex, and indirectly, their teens’ behavior.
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According to an article written by the National
Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD), teens (particularly
girls) with strong religious views are less likely to have sex than
are less religious teens. This is largely because their religious
views lead them to view the consequences of having sex negatively.
According to a recent analysis of the NICHD-funded Add Health
Survey, religion reduces the likelihood of adolescents engaging in
early sex by shaping their attitudes and beliefs about sexual
activity. The study also found that parents’ religious beliefs and
attitudes toward sex did not directly influence teens’ decisions to
have sex. Rather, parents’ attitudes toward sex seemed to influence
their teens’ own attitudes toward sex, and indirectly, their teens’
behavior. When teens do have sex, their beliefs about the
consequences of sexual activity become more permissive (more
positive or favorable) but their religious views do not change. In
particular, adolescent girls who had sex reported that they were
more positive about having sex in the future. However, the greatest
predictor of whether teens would have sex, regardless of their
religious views or attitudes, was whether or not they were dating.1
1Strong
Religious Views Decrease Teens’ Likelihood of Having Sex,
National Institute of Child Health & Human Development, April 2,
2003, pp. 1-3.
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