Yes. Areas that teach abstance only programs have higher teen pregnancy and STD rates than areas that teach in depth programs that encompass all areas of teen sexuality. These programs are not funded by the government and have to come out of school budget dollars resulting in most schools not offering them. However these programs teach the importance of condoms and how to properly use them, reliable birth control methods and where/how they can be obtained, emergency contraception, peer pressure and teen sexuality, STDS and AIDS/HIV - what they are and how to prevent them, pregnancy and child birth, teen pregnancy and it's physiological and social factors, adoption, abortion, and being a teen mother.
Yes it do help. Today's young generation might have skewed picture about sex owing to the profileration of pornography. Appropriate education will help them in having correct pespective of sex. In any sexual education, sex should be given right place and value and not overrated. This helps in maintaining balance.
Yes. That and contraceptives.
You can write about how to prevent teen pregnancy. Or what causes teen pregnancy. Talking about the right form of education to prevent teen pregnancy will work as well.
Offer contraceptives within the school to anybody who NEEDS them.
no it can't prevent pregnancy
BV won't prevent pregnancy.
Vitamins don't prevent pregnancy.
Lithium does NOT prevent pregnancy.
NO ! ONLY contraception or abstinence can prevent pregnancy !
No. Cytotec can be used for abortion but not to prevent pregnancy.
Starch as in pasta, potatoes etc? That does not prevent pregnancy.
Yaz is a birth control pill. It is intended to prevent pregnancy.
Advil don't prevent pregnancy no matter how many you take.
There aren't any school programs that prevent child obesity, but several programs target child obesity. In general, physical education and strict meal programs are two of these ways. Certain schools and school systems have their own programs. For example, Las Vegas has a program called "Knocking Out Obesity." http://www.ktnv.com/story/14679785/las-vegas-schools-aim