In another scientific study of what would seem perfectly obvious, researchers have found a strong link between how much sex teenagers watch on TV and their likelihood of premarital pregnancy. From Sexual content on TV is linked to teen pregnancy:
The teens who watched the most sexual content on TV (the 90th percentile) were twice as likely to have become pregnant or caused a pregnancy compared to the teens who watched the least amount of sexual content on TV (the 10th percentile). Adolescents who lived in a two-parent household had a lower probability of pregnancy while African Americans and adolescents with behavior problems were more likely to be involved in a pregnancy.
Parents should consider limiting their teen’s exposure to sexual content on TV, said the study’s lead author, Anita Chandra, a behavioral scientist at RAND, a nonprofit research organization. Television producers should consider more realistic depictions of the consequences of sex in their scripts, she says, noting that there is little content on the consequences of unprotected sex. About 1 million adolescents become pregnant each year in the United States.