Perhaps this is how it will end. Not with a bang but with a whimper. Will science come to the rescue?

Sperm counts and teen pregnancy rates

Today, May 3 — in case you didn’t know it — is “National Day To Prevent Teen Pregnancy.” In the past decade, possibly no social program has been as dramatically effective as the effort to reduce teen pregnancy, and no results so uniformly celebrated. Between 1990 and 2000 the U.S. teen pregnancy rate plummeted by 28 percent, dropping from 117 to 84 pregnancies per 1,000 women aged 15-19. Births to teenagers are also down, as are teen abortion rates. It’s an achievement so profound and so heartening that left and right are eager to take credit for it, and both can probably do so. Child-health advocates generally acknowledge that liberal sex education and conservative abstinence initiatives are both to thank for the fact that fewer teenagers are ending up in school bathroom stalls sobbing over the results of a home pregnancy test.

What, though, if the drop in teen pregnancy isn’t a good thing, or not entirely? What if there’s a third explanation, one that has nothing to do with just-say-no campaigns or safe-sex educational posters? What if teenagers are less fertile than they used to be?

Not the girls — the boys?

This study postulated that “environmental influences,” particularly widely used chemical compounds with an impact like that of the female hormone estrogen, might be contributing to a drop in fertility among males. If true, this was obviously an alarming development, particularly given that human sperm counts are already strikingly low compared to almost any other species. “Humans have the worst sperm except for gorillas and ganders of any animal on the planet,” points out Sherman Silber, a high-profile urologist who attributes this in part to short-term female monogamy.



  1. Dean says:

    With nearly 7 BILLION humans on this planet, I would say that a decrease in male fertility is a GOOD thing!

  2. Don says:

    Will somebody please explain the last part to me? The bit about “‘Humans have the worst sperm’ [attributted] in part to short-term female monogamy.”

  3. Don says:

    Never mind. I read the article. Something I’m expected to do, I guess.

  4. Don says:

    One last thing: Thinking it over, the implication is that it’s evolutionarily advantageous for females to be promiscuous. Gives us guys more robust sperm. Not that I need it of course.

  5. spsffan says:

    Geez, with 5 plus billion humans infecting the planet already, why would we consider this a bad thing?

    The human race is in absolutely no danger of extinction from lack of fertility.

    Dave

  6. Mike says:

    A lot more has changed since 1900 than just education. I really question the logic in making a comparison between then and now.

  7. ECA says:

    Its amazing that, in the rural area, I live in…Its estimated that 1/3 of teens are infected by STD…

    Under the IDEAl that humans are made to reproduce, MORE humans.. What AGE is the best?
    WHY do “children” become pregnant, when WE/THEY dont want them to BE??
    Hmmm???
    WHY do hormones HIT, at such an early are, if THEY SHOULDNT have children?
    AND then wear off, by the time we get them out of school?

    It drive you CRAZY sitting in school, TRYING to control your thoughts, with hormones SPEAKING FOR YOU.
    By the time they are done with schooling, GIRLS generally are almost finished with HORMONES and cn control them…

  8. ECA says:

    there is a comment that isnt mentioned..
    that in a few species that reproduction goes down, Mentally and physically, when SOME species start to over populate..
    IF this is true, i WOULD LOVE IT… CLOSE the borders, and lets keep this country OPEN…forget the crowds..

  9. Milo says:

    I see 2 comments already asking how a drop in fertility can be a bad thing. I’m afraid you’re not thinking it through. A drop in fertility is symptomatic of larger health problems.

  10. Me says:

    Testicles hand down because sperm production is aided by a lower temperature. Fertility is down due to Global Warming (higher temp on the nads)

  11. RTaylor says:

    Good, I’m tired of seeing 30 year old grandmothers. I’m a firm believer that every baby born should be injected with a device to prevent pregnancy. When they come of age they can apply to take an intelligence test to have it removed. They would also have to demonstrate means of support. Like the song goes, “Freedom’s just another word for nothing else to loose”.

  12. Mr. Canuck Fusion says:

    #11, I like it. I really do. But who will write the test, creationists or scientists?

  13. ECA says:

    thats easy, give it to them ALL..
    But I think sending kids to tech schools after age 12 would be MUCH better.
    As MANY of the best have never gone to school, or been tested and have been VERY poor.
    Intelligence is measured in many ways, and TIME does educate.


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