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Connexions must respect young people’s confidentiality, say Government’s teen pregnancy advisers

Posted: 14 July 2003 | Subscribe Online


Connexions’ policy on confidentiality should be urgently re-examined, the Independent Advisory Group (IAG) on Teenage Pregnancy has told the government.
Personal advisers working in schools should treat one-to-one consultations between young people and personal advisers as confidential unless there are serious child protection concerns.
In its annual report, published last week, the IAG, says it  is “deeply concerned” about current situation in which personal advisors working in schools have to adhere to existing school policies on confidentiality which may differ from school to school and from the wider Connexions service.  Young people in schools using the Connexions service “must be told of the level of confidentiality they can expect before they disclose information.”

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Young people are entitled to a fully confidential service, with information only being disclosed for serious child protection reasons or with the young person’s consent, says the IAG. “Research with young people consistently shows that they will not seek advice or disclose personal problems to any professional unless they are reassured about the confidentiality of the discussion…
“The current position undermines the potential of the Connexions service and its vital contribution to reducing teenage pregnancy. Given this position it has to be asked what added value Connexions can offer to the most vulnerable in these schools.”
The independent advisory group, chaired by Lady Winifred Tumim, was established in 2000 to monitor the Teenage Pregnancy Strategy and advise government. It recommends that under 16s should have the same advice to confidentiality as adults when they seek advice about contraception, sex and relationships and there should be a new advertising campaign to inform them of this right. Health and other professionals should be given revised guidance to clarify that young people can and should seek advice when they need it without worrying about their confidence being breached.
The report says the teenage pregnancy strategy overall is working, and young people are becoming more confident about using sexual health services. Latest figures show a 10 per cent drop in the rate of teenage conceptions among under 18s, and a fall of 11 per cent among under 16s. The teenage pregnancy strategy aims to halve the under 18 conception rate by 2020 and to increase the participation of teenage mothers in education, training and employment by 60 per cent.
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But if the pressure was not kept up these achievements could be jeopardised.  More needs to be done to engage boys and young men in sex and relationship education in school, which they often feel is irrelevant. Young people from black and ethnic minority groups also need to be targeted, says the report.
The IAG recommends that sex and relationship education should start and Key Stage 1 as part of the statutory curriculum.
On the issue of support, the report says that many young parents still have very low incomes, face many obstacles in returning to education, and work and live in inappropriate housing. It recommends better financial incentives to encourage them to return to education, as well as affordable and adequate childcare and housing.



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