jsmog:

Canada’s teen birth and abortion rate drops by 36.9 per cent
Better access to contraception, higher quality sex education and shifting social norms have contributed to a 36.9 per cent decline in Canada’s teen birth and abortion rate between 1996 and 2006, according to a report released today by the Sex Information and Education Council of Canada.
America’s emphasis on abstinence-only sex ed “tends to result in a higher percentage of teens becoming pregnant,” as does the country’s lack of universal health care. Poverty is another factor.
Among the four countries compared for 2006, Canada boasted the lowest teen birth and abortion rate per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 (27.9), followed by Sweden (31.4), England/Wales (60.3), and the United States (61.2).

jsmog:

Canada’s teen birth and abortion rate drops by 36.9 per cent

Better access to contraception, higher quality sex education and shifting social norms have contributed to a 36.9 per cent decline in Canada’s teen birth and abortion rate between 1996 and 2006, according to a report released today by the Sex Information and Education Council of Canada.

America’s emphasis on abstinence-only sex ed “tends to result in a higher percentage of teens becoming pregnant,” as does the country’s lack of universal health care. Poverty is another factor.

Among the four countries compared for 2006, Canada boasted the lowest teen birth and abortion rate per 1,000 women aged 15 to 19 (27.9), followed by Sweden (31.4), England/Wales (60.3), and the United States (61.2).

(via fatquean)

crowcrow:

vulvas by betty dodson

(Source: lyssypoobears)

vicemag:

So here’s a fashion shoot about getting your period in public

[An array of 14th-16th century speculums] via the Wellcome Collection

[An array of 14th-16th century speculums]
via the Wellcome Collection

(Source: drtuesdaygjohnson, via stephthesteph)


welcome-earthlings:

This is related to the on-going debate in Chile on whether or not abortion should be legalized. It was legal at one point, but because the Opus Dei of the Catholic Church has an extraneous amount of power it is now illegal. Pink posters have been plastered all over Valparaíso declaring “aborto sí, aborto no, eso lo decido yo” (yes to abortion, no to abortion, this is something I decide). Hopefully I’ll get a picture of them soon.


welcome-earthlings
:

This is related to the on-going debate in Chile on whether or not abortion should be legalized. It was legal at one point, but because the Opus Dei of the Catholic Church has an extraneous amount of power it is now illegal. Pink posters have been plastered all over Valparaíso declaring “aborto sí, aborto no, eso lo decido yo” (yes to abortion, no to abortion, this is something I decide). Hopefully I’ll get a picture of them soon.

(via krstnrdrgz)

"Sex-negative messages don’t keep people from having sex. They keep people from having good sex. They keep people from having pride in their sexuality, from sexual self-awareness. They keep people from asking questions about sex, and communicating with their partners. They discourage experimentation. They blur the lines between consensual sex and rape by framing all sex as an undifferentiated mass of “bad."

Sex-Negative Education and the Spectre of Rape - Sex Positive Activism   

(via chubby-bunnies)

"

I know I’ve told this story before, but my abusive ex refused to let me take birth control. I was on the pill until he found them in my purse.

I went to the Student Health Center—they were completely unhelpful, choosing to lecture me about the importance of safe sex (recommending condoms) instead of actually listening to my problem.

Then I went to Planned Parenthood. The Nurse Practitioner took one look at my fading bruises and stopped the exam. She called in the doctor. The doctor came in and simply asked me: “Are you ready to leave him?” When I denied that I was being abused, she didn’t argue with me. She just asked me what I needed. I said I need a birth control method that my boyfriend couldn’t detect. She recommended a few options and we decided on Depo.

When I told her that my boyfriend read my emails and listened to my phone messages and was known to follow me, she suggested to do the Depo injections at off hours when the clinic was normally closed. She made a note in my chart and instructed the front desk never to leave messages for me—instead, she programmed her personal cell phone number into my phone under the name “Nora”. She told me she would call me to schedule my appointments; she wouldn’t leave a message, but I should call her back when I was able to.

And that was it. No judgment. No lecture. She walked me to the door and told me to call her day or night if I needed anything. That she lived 5 blocks from campus and would come get me. That I wasn’t alone. That she just wanted me to be safe.

I never called her to come to my rescue. But I have no doubt that she would have come if I had called. She kept me on Depo for a year, giving me those monthly injections in secret, helping me prevent a desperately unwanted pregnancy.

I cannot thank Planned Parenthood enough for the work they do.

"

Curious Georgiana 

(Source: sexistmorons, via gingerrqueer)

pussy-strut:

hey

pussy-strut:

hey

(Source: farpegi, via fieryholocaust)