Nurses will now work for birth control in all the schools of England in a move to slash the rising incidence of teenage pregnancies
Nurses will now work for birth control in all the schools of England in a move to slash the rising incidence of teenage pregnancies.
There are currently 2,409 nurses who work in primary and secondary schools across the country but the latest announcement signals a massive extension, reported the online edition of Daily Mail.By 2010, every primary care trust will be funded to have at least one full-time qualified nurse working with each small group of state primary schools and their local secondary, it said.
Clinics based in secondary schools already offer condoms and the morning-after pill to pupils or arrange fast-track doctors' appointments.
Statistics released recently reveal that thousands of 13-year-old girls have been handed the morning-after pill by health service staff without their parents' permission.
Among 302 primary care trusts across the country, around 2,400 girls aged 13 or younger received the morning-after pill last year.
However, teenage pregnancies are continuing to rise despite a 40-million pound government campaign to reduce the problem. Sexually transmitted diseases are also reaching epidemic levels.
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It says nurses are the best people to provide this service because they are "able to assess need and prescribe appropriate medication/provide specialist contraception advice for the future".
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--Edited IANS