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Thursday, 23 December, 1999, 12:28 GMT
Christmas sex dangers revealed
Christmas excesses can lead to a lack of caution
Christmas is the season of unprotected sex, according to a study.
The report cites as evidence a rise in abortions and sexually transmitted diseases in the
New Year. It also reveals a peak of births - particularly outside marriage - nine
months after Christmas. There was another, smaller peak indicating increased
unprotected sex during the summer holiday period.
The report's authors are calling for seasonal sexual health campaigns, along the lines of
Christmas drink-drive advertisements, to counter the trend.
Sex statistics
The study, published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine on Tuesday, analysed
data from the Office of National Statistics, the Public Health Laboratory Service and
condom manufacturers.
Women who drink are more likely to have sex
They studied figures for births, abortions, incidence of STDs and condom sales from 1990
to 1996.
Birth statistics were divided into those that occurred within marriage and those outside.
Births outside were less likely to come as the result of a planned pregnancy, the
researchers said. The team found similar trends for each year, pointing to an
increase in unsafe sex in the run up to Christmas, with a smaller increase in summer
months.
They found that:
The UK abortion rate is highest every year between January and March;
The number of people going for HIV tests is highest in the first quarter of each year,
rising again slightly in late summer;
Condom sales reach their greatest peak just before Christmas, with a smaller rise in early
summer;
The UK birth rate tends to rise in September, nine months after the Christmas holiday;
The September peak is even more pronounced in births outside marriage.
The research was conducted by Kaye Wellings and colleagues at the London School of Hygiene
and Tropical Medicine. They say the findings indicate a need for better provision of
contraception advice at these key times.
International trends
The trends are not unique to Britain. In places where New Year is a bigger
festival than Christmas, or Christmas is celebrated by the Julian Calendar (on 7 January),
the peak in births follows slightly later, in October.
People are less careful when on holiday
Alison Hadley is national policy officer for Brook Advisory Centres, which offer free
advice on sex and contraception to young people. She said the findings reflected the
organisation's experience - the centres see more people around Christmas and the summer
holidays.
She called for a three-pronged campaign.
"Beforehand you say recognise what's going to go on - take your condoms, get your
contraception sorted out, be prepared.
"At the time, reinforce the emergency contraception message, so if you don't use the
condom or make a mistake you know where to get emergency contraception.
"If you haven't managed to do that, get a pregnancy test as soon as you're worried,
and get infection screening as well."
She said the organisation would rather the first stage worked alone, but if it failed then
the other stages could act as a "fallback".
Because it was difficult to access advice services over the extended Christmas holiday,
she said, it could be useful for women to have a "morning after" pill ready just
in case. "It would make a useful backstop," Ms Hadley said.
Source: (http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_274000/274973.stm)
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