By: Youth Tech Health
Publisher: Youth Tech Health
Date: October 11, 2017
For most of us, our smartphone has turned into a secondary limb- we use it to stay in touch, work, read the news, track our steps, and educate ourselves…but what about educating ourselves about our own bodies? Sex ed is still too often kept in the dark ages. Between less than stellar curriculums that don’t talk about vital subjects like contraception or LGBTQ identities, and with the lack of innovative technology available at most educational institutions It leaves a lot to be desired for young people, who are being underserved, unreached, and as a consequence, often left with a sexual awareness that is more akin to the ‘60s than 2017.
Health technologies allow young people who might not otherwise have access to the resources, tools, and information they need to keep themselves safe and advocate for their own health. According to our recent national study, TECHsex, nearly 90% of youth own a smartphone compared to just 26% 6 years ago. In addition to that 92% of them are going on to the internet everyday. However, only 48% in the US even require sex education to be taught, and of those, only 25% of middle schools and 60% of high schools included topics like contraception in their curriculums.
Not only are young people not receiving sufficient information about sexual health from their educational institutions, but they actually prefer to use technology when discussing safe sex. A 2014 study published in the Journal of Adolescent Health found, 49% of adolescents used technology to discuss sexual health topics with their partner. Not only that, but condom use was found to be 3 times higher for the participants who did use tech tools to talk about their sexuality, versus those who did not.
It’s important to note that these health technologies are especially vital for young people who belong to sexual and ethnic minorities – in addition to homeless and at risk youth. One example from our TECHsex report is a study on homeless and at-risk youth, which found that not only are these young people frequently using the internet to find resources and support, but that those who do report having a higher knowledge of HIV and other STIs among homeless youth.
At YTH we are proud to have piloted many youth-centered tech-based health technologies. A few examples of our work in this area include our they2ze app, which connects transgender-spectrum youth to peer-reviewed health services; PrEPTECH, which allows gay and bi young men of color to access PrEP through an integrated telemedicine system, StreetConnect, an app which connects homeless youth to vital health and care services, and multiple reminder services that provide youth with the ability to create personalized health reminders for medication, appointments, refills, and more.
In addition to our own work on this front, YTH empowers youth and youth-serving organizations to share their research, technologies and advocacy work at our annual YTH Live conference. YTH Live is the only conference that gather innovators in the fields of youth health, tech, and youth advocacy in one place.. In 2017 we hosted dozens of organizations with innovative health technologies for sexual health present their work at the conference (although these are all sexual health examples, YTH Live features many other topical areas as a part of our conference, including public mental health, global health, substance use and prevention, social media, and much more- but obviously not noted here because this piece is sex-ed specific). Some highlights include Planned Parenthood’s birth control and period tracker Spot On, SextEd, a textline for sex and dating in Montreal out of AIDS Community Care Montreal, GirlsHealth.gov, which was co-created with the youth the site is made to serve, Breakthrough U, which is using online video to approach topics in sexuality, as well as all of the prototypes which came out of our YTH Live 2017 Design Challenge to create an innovative solution to influence youth health.
These disparities are at the heart of why we bring together pioneers, youth leaders, researchers, providers, and other health professionals each year at YTH Live; we’re working to create a new reality for young people across the globe.
YTH Live is celebrating ten years of creating connections among vibrant thought leaders, makers, and doers and invite you to celebrate this milestone with us May 6-7, 2017 at Bespoke in San Francisco.
Do you work to empower young people through health technologies? Have an innovative app, game, tech solution, or program that you’d like to share to expand this conversation? We invite you to submit a proposal in our call for abstracts for YTH Live 2018, where you’ll have the opportunity to share your work in front of 400+ influencers in the fields of technology, health, and youth innovation. Learn more about the submission process, guidelines, and criteria here.
Source: https://yth.org/technology-crucial-youth-sexual-health-heres/
Comment: This article does a sufficient job of discussing health technologies. This innovative method is extremely important for us to understand because technology is a key way to educate many teens as they are already on the internet and involved in the digital crowd. It is just a matter now of building tools centered around that philosophy. This topic is particularly interesting and viable now as well given the current state of the world.
Hi Blaine! I think this article does a great job of showing ways to resonate with younger populations about sex education. I really like the SextEd intervention because it’s such a simple way to get content across and leverages an accessible method of communication that everyone already uses. Also, I liked this method because it seems like it’s open to all cell phone users, not just those with smartphones which might be something to take into account as well—how do we engage the widest audience of people the most effectively?