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  • Daggering linked to teen Sex

    'Degrading' Lyrics Linked to Teen Sex
    • Buzz Up
    By Randy Dotinga
    HealthDay Reporter by Randy Dotinga
    healthday Reporter – 49 mins ago

    TUESDAY, Feb. 24 (HealthDay News) -- There's still no firm proof that raunchy music makes kids have sex, but a new study provides another suggestion that there's at least some kind of link between "degrading" songs and teenage sexual activity.
    The findings indicate that "people who are exposed to certain messages in music are more likely to copy or emulate what they hear," said Dr. Brian A. Primack, a pediatrician and lead author of the study released Tuesday.
    In other words, teens who hear about degrading sexual practices in their favorite songs might decide to try them out themselves. However, it's also possible that the reverse is true: Kids who have sex just happen to like raunchy music.
    Expanding on previous research that linked sexually charged songs to sex itself, the researchers surveyed 711 Pittsburgh-area ninth-grade students in 2006 and 2007 about their sexuality activity and the songs they liked to listen to.
    The researchers then determined how many of the 279 most popular songs in 2005 were "degrading" because they referred to sex that's "based only on physical characteristics" and features a "power differential" instead of being mutually consensual.
    For example, "Wait (The Whisper Song)" by the rap group known as Ying Yang Twins was deemed degrading, apparently because it included a reference to rough intercourse.
    By contrast, the lyrics of the rap song "Baby I'm Back" by Baby Bash, including the lines "I wanna be stronger than we've ever been/I'm here to cater to you," was said to be not degrading.
    The researchers looked for links between the listening habits of the students and their sexual activity. Their findings are scheduled to be published in the April issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
    After adjusting the statistics in their findings to account for the possible influence of such factors as race and age, the researchers found that youths who listened most to "degrading" songs were more than twice as likely to have had intercourse.
    But the findings don't prove that the music caused kids to have sex, acknowledged Primack, who's an assistant professor of medicine and pediatrics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.
    "The opposite could be true -- that people who have more sex then go out and seek music with degrading sexual messages," he said.
    Other researchers have linked music to sexual activity, but evidence of a direct cause-and-effect relationship remains elusive.
    In the current study and an earlier one based on the same analysis of 279 songs from 2005, the researchers did not identify any degrading songs by title and disclosed lyrics from only a handful of them.
    They said that 64 percent of rap songs analyzed were sexually degrading, compared with 7 percent of country songs and 3 percent of pop songs.
    What to do? Laura Lindberg, senior research associate at the Guttmacher Institute in New York City, said that teens need to learn how to interpret and analyze the messages they see in the world around them.
    But, "there's no silver bullet," she said. "If you get all teenagers to turn in their iPods, the teen pregnancy rate is not going to automatically decline."
    More information:
    The Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States has an online booklet for teenagers on talking about sex.
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

  • #2
    Yawn....

    Originally posted by Assasin View Post
    There's still no firm proof that raunchy music makes kids have sex, but a new study provides another suggestion that there's at least some kind of link between "degrading" songs and teenage sexual activity.
    The findings indicate that "people who are exposed to certain messages in music are more likely to copy or emulate what they hear," said Dr. Brian A. Primack, a pediatrician and lead author of the study released Tuesday.
    In other words, teens who hear about degrading sexual practices in their favorite songs might decide to try them out themselves.
    Assasin, good post.

    Now forumites, after looking at the HealthDay news item above, do we in jamaica really need a study on the sexual effects of daggering?! (And who is going to be charged with such a study, the Carolyn Cooper-led dancehall enthusiasts at the University of the West Indies?)

    My goodness! No wonder old folks look with scorn on our generation and the generation immediately behind some of us, as we clearly lack that spontaneous thinking ability called commonsense! What on earth do we expect might happen after a male and female grind against each other to the sound of dancehall’s powerful rhythms? Do we really need a study for this?!

    Comment


    • #3
      On the face of it you would seem to be right. However, I'm struck that purely on personal experience the amount of middle-aged and older women who had their first children in their teens. These being relatively conservative people who pretty much feel the same about modern mores as you do. Do you have any figures on teen pregnancies in Jamaica in the last 3-4 decades. Not refuting what you are saying I just would like to know.
      Respect

      Comment


      • #4
        Riggghhhhhttttt!

        Originally posted by Assasin View Post
        'Degrading' Lyrics Linked to Teen Sex
        • Buzz Up
        By Randy Dotinga
        HealthDay Reporter by Randy Dotinga
        healthday Reporter – 49 mins ago

        TUESDAY, Feb. 24 (HealthDay News) -- There's still no firm proof that raunchy music makes kids have sex, but a new study provides another suggestion that there's at least some kind of link between "degrading" songs and teenage sexual activity.
        The findings indicate that "people who are exposed to certain messages in music are more likely to copy or emulate what they hear," said Dr. Brian A. Primack, a pediatrician and lead author of the study released Tuesday.
        In other words, teens who hear about degrading sexual practices in their favorite songs might decide to try them out themselves. However, it's also possible that the reverse is true: Kids who have sex just happen to like raunchy music.
        Expanding on previous research that linked sexually charged songs to sex itself, the researchers surveyed 711 Pittsburgh-area ninth-grade students in 2006 and 2007 about their sexuality activity and the songs they liked to listen to.
        The researchers then determined how many of the 279 most popular songs in 2005 were "degrading" because they referred to sex that's "based only on physical characteristics" and features a "power differential" instead of being mutually consensual.
        For example, "Wait (The Whisper Song)" by the rap group known as Ying Yang Twins was deemed degrading, apparently because it included a reference to rough intercourse.
        By contrast, the lyrics of the rap song "Baby I'm Back" by Baby Bash, including the lines "I wanna be stronger than we've ever been/I'm here to cater to you," was said to be not degrading.
        The researchers looked for links between the listening habits of the students and their sexual activity. Their findings are scheduled to be published in the April issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
        After adjusting the statistics in their findings to account for the possible influence of such factors as race and age, the researchers found that youths who listened most to "degrading" songs were more than twice as likely to have had intercourse.
        But the findings don't prove that the music caused kids to have sex, acknowledged Primack, who's an assistant professor of medicine and pediatrics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.
        "The opposite could be true -- that people who have more sex then go out and seek music with degrading sexual messages," he said.
        Other researchers have linked music to sexual activity, but evidence of a direct cause-and-effect relationship remains elusive.
        In the current study and an earlier one based on the same analysis of 279 songs from 2005, the researchers did not identify any degrading songs by title and disclosed lyrics from only a handful of them.
        They said that 64 percent of rap songs analyzed were sexually degrading, compared with 7 percent of country songs and 3 percent of pop songs.
        What to do? Laura Lindberg, senior research associate at the Guttmacher Institute in New York City, said that teens need to learn how to interpret and analyze the messages they see in the world around them.
        But, "there's no silver bullet," she said. "If you get all teenagers to turn in their iPods, the teen pregnancy rate is not going to automatically decline."
        More information:
        The Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States has an online booklet for teenagers on talking about sex.

        thats a bit closer to the truth
        Last edited by Shola; February 24, 2009, 07:53 PM.

        Comment


        • #5
          True regarding the previous(and the previous previous) )so called holier than thou generation.
          My problem is censorship.Sales determine what tune...DJs do, the problem is the people.....





          Blessed

          Comment


          • #6
            Is all up to the selectors, dancehall nuh have any sales.

            Comment


            • #7
              Even so it is played because it will be well received, again it is the taste of the people that is crucial, and the needed filter.



              Blessed

              Comment


              • #8
                Why do they link everything except bad parenting to teen sex?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Lionpaw View Post
                  Why do they link everything except bad parenting to teen sex?
                  It's called an agenda.

                  Comment

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