Most Teens Who Abstain Aren't Engaging in Oral Sex Instead

Most Teens Who Abstain Aren't Engaging in Oral Sex Instead
The Nemours Foundation

Parents of young virgins may still worry that their kids are turning to oral sex as an alternative to going all the way. But a new study shows that most teens who've decided to abstain are actually sticking to their guns about sexual conduct — they're not having vaginal or oral sex.

Looking at data from a national survey of more than 2,200 15- to 19-year-olds, researchers found that more than half of the teens (both boys and girls) said they'd had oral sex, making it more common than vaginal sex. But those who hadn't yet had intercourse were much less likely to have tried oral sex either — only a little more than a quarter of virgins said they'd opted to have oral sex.

In fact, "non-virgins were almost four times as likely as virgins to have had oral sex," says the study. Teens who reported they had had anal sex (1 in 10 in this survey) were also much more likely to have had vaginal sex.

A popular perception seems to be that teens are having lots of oral sex as a way to stay virgins (or "technical virgins") and avoid getting pregnant or contracting a sexually transmitted disease (STD), but the researchers found "little evidence" of "serial oral sex" among teens who were still virgins. And "most adolescent virgins who had ever had oral sex had only one sexual partner in their lifetime," says the study.

The researchers also found that vaginal and oral sex seem to go hand in hand — that within 6 months of having sex for the first time more than 80% of teens had engaged in oral sex, too.

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