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2007-06-28 11:59:39 · 26 answers · asked by Anonymous in News & Events Other - News & Events

26 answers

i would say body image, and how u look! i didn't come to school for three days because my face suddenly broke out!

2007-06-28 12:04:14 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Bless your coronary heart. Being the be certain in NO relaxing on occasion huh? There are countless uncomplicated strategies to redirect the approach of "an F is not any huge deal". inform her that if she does not commence doing greater advantageous you would be sending her to a private college or greater advantageous yet an all ladies college the place no men are around for something of her existence. (i'm not announcing she's into boys only oftentimes that scares a youthful woman) you're able to make her write sentences each and every day, say 50-a hundred cases, "i visit income and positioned across my grade as much as a satifactory grade with the aid of my mothers standards." Have her write that common until eventually she brings the grade up. She ought to easily get the factor. If she does not write it then a sturdy ole style whoopin' on no account injury all of us.

2016-10-03 06:36:48 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

STDs. Teenagers are particularly susceptible to sexually transmitted diseases or STDs. This fact is alarming since more teens are sexually active today than ever before. An entire generation is at risk and the saddest part about it is that most of them are unaware of the dangers they face. Our teenagers must be given the correct information to help them realize that saving themselves sexually until marriage is the only way to stay healthy.
The medical reasons for teens' high susceptibility to STDs specifically relates to females. The cervix of a teenage girl has a lining which produces mucus that is a great growth medium for viruses and bacteria. As a girl reaches her 20s or has a baby, this lining is replaced with a tougher, more resistant lining. Also during the first two years of menstruation, 50% of the periods occur with-out ovulation. This will produce a more liquid mucus which also grows bacteria and viruses very well. A 15-year-old girl has a 1-in-8 chance of developing pelvic inflammatory disease simply by having sex, whereas a 24-year-old woman has only a 1- in-80 chance in that situation.

Teenagers do not always respond to antibiotic treatment for pelvic inflammatory disease, and occasionally such teenage girls require a hysterectomy. Teenage infertility is also an increasing problem. In 1965, only 3.6% of the married couples between ages 20 and 24 were infertile; by 1982, that figure had nearly tripled to 10.6%. The infertility rate is surely higher than that now with the alarming spread of chlamydia.

Teenagers are also more susceptible to human papilloma virus, HPV. Rates of HPV infection in teenagers can be as high as 40%, whereas in the adult population, the rate is less than 15%. Teenagers are also more likely than adults to develop precancerous growths as a result of HPV infection, and they are more likely to develop pelvic inflammatory disease.

Apart from the increased risk from STDs in teens, teenage pregnancy is also at unprecedented levels, over 1 million pregnancies, and 400,000 abortions in 1985. Abortion is not a healthy procedure for anyone to undergo, especially a teenager. It is far better to have not gotten pregnant. Oral contraceptives are not as effective with teenagers, mainly because teens are more apt to forget to take the pill. Over a one-year period, as many as 9 to 18% of teenage girls using oral contraceptives become pregnant.

2007-06-28 12:01:46 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

I think peer-pressure is the worst if you're talking about personal issues. Considering the world, teens are the future and need to start speaking out their ideas of what kind of world they will be living in. Filling out surveys for stores, restraunts, and stuff is a good start.

2007-06-28 12:05:20 · answer #4 · answered by student_?s 2 · 0 0

Depends on the teen, but big issues often include sexuality, dating, friends, jobs, my space, i-pods, computer games, clothes, cell phones, getting a car, and last (but not necessarily least) schoolwork and getting into college. I would not wish to undertake my teen years again for any amount of money, and I send all best wishes to those going through them.

2007-06-28 12:12:34 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Besides the Drama, The biggest issue is getting a job so you can get your liscence and pay insurance for driving.

2007-06-28 14:16:34 · answer #6 · answered by vanillasugar4321 2 · 0 0

One that I can think of is the sorry state of our environment. As the next generation, teenagers inheret the problems of generations before and this is a serious one.

2007-06-28 12:04:11 · answer #7 · answered by sleepingliv 7 · 0 0

Being a teenager (16) ..I'd have to say peer pressure to do questionable things.

2007-06-28 12:01:35 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Pregnacy is a huge problem for teens.


Love is an action not an emotion, Pandora

2007-06-28 12:53:08 · answer #9 · answered by Pandora R 5 · 0 0

The jazz cigarettes! And sex.

But big teenage issues still aren't very important!

2007-06-28 12:02:40 · answer #10 · answered by The Dude 2 · 1 0

There are too many to count but, the most threatening are probably STD's, violence, drunk driving, unwanted pregnancies and such. At least in my school those are the (4) main problems/threats we have the pleasure :-/ to hear our staff talk us to death about whenever one occurs.

2007-06-28 12:03:18 · answer #11 · answered by Minnie 2 · 1 0

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