Conventional wisdom holds that teens have oral sex to maintain 'technical virginity.' Or do they?
Led by Dr. Hernan Delgado, 754 participants were monitored during childhood and again five years later when they were aged 12 to 18. The team found that the earlier in their life they were exposed to adult content, the earlier they became sexually active. To be more specific, for every hour of adult-targeted television or movies watched over two sample days by children when they were six to eight years old, there was a 33 percent increased risk of becoming sexually active in early adolescence, reports HealthDay News. "Television and movies are among the leading sources of information about sex and relationships for adolescents. Our research shows that their sexual attitudes and expectations are influenced much earlier in life," Delgado said in a news release announcing the study findings.
"Adult entertainment often deals with issues and challenges that adults face, including the complexities of sexual relationships," co-author David Bickham, staff scientist in the Center on Media and Child Health, said in the news release. "Children have neither the life experience nor the brain development to fully differentiate between a reality they are moving toward and a fiction meant solely to entertain. Children learn from the media, and when they watch media with sexual references and innuendos, our research suggests they are more likely to engage in sexual activity earlier in life." The study was presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies annual meeting, in Baltimore, Maryland.

