What Does The Future Of Our Childreh Hold? Researcher Says Media Could Influence Sexual Activity Among Teenagers By DAVID L DILLARD Chronicit Staff Writer As pregnancies continue among even younger and younger women, some professionals think the programs adolescents watch on television-and the music they listen to could accelerate their interest in sexual activity. Joyce Wheeling, coordinator of the Adolescent Pregnancy Preven tion Council in Winston-Salem, believes that media reinforces sex ual activity because of its highly sexual content "I think some music and televi sion, like MTV (Music Television), does have an influence (on sexual behavior among teens)," she said. "All types of media, including mag azines, uses sexuality to sell every thing. That adds to the problem." Barbara Huberman, executive director of the North Carolina Coalition on Adolescent Pregnancy (NCCAP) in Charlotte, said the media has a tremendous impact on adolescent behavior. "A lot of their influences come from the programs they watch on TV and influences through other forms of the media," she said. "I'm not bashing the media, but they are contributing to the problem." The media influence on teen age pregnancy was taken serious enough to invite a communication researcher to make a presentation at the council's annual meeting last May. ...? "Media are important sex edu cators," said Jane Brown, director of graduate studies in the School of Journalism and Mass Communica tions at UNC-Chapel Hill. "You bring what you already know to the experience, and some don't have a sophisticated sense. Media could provide a frame of reference for those who don't have it" Brown contends that kids are more susceptible to sexuality in the media because they "start looking to complete their sexual scripts." "The majority get some educa tion after they have already started sex," she said. "Media is constantly suggesting (sex) as an important behavior and puts it high on the agenda." Brown, who presents her research to Planned Parenthood of the Triad councils across the coun try annually, cautioned that media images are not interpreted the same way by everyone. "We often jump to conclusions that there is one unified effect," Brown said, "but it depends very much on who the viewers are." Huberman believes that educa tion alone, especially from the media, is not sufficient enough to totally offset the problem. "Education by itself is not going to change behavior," said Huberman. "Knowledge is one of the most important facton, but this is a complex problem and it will require a complex solution." Future of Crack Babies Not Bright, Says Medical Professionals from page A1 birth to a child. "They count 10 toes and 10 fin gers (on their babies) and they think it's all right to continue using crack," said Margaret Brown, a sub stance abuse counselor at Step One who works with drug-abusing moth ers. Crack ? the crystallized form of cocaine that is smoked ? has plagued inner_cities- since the mid 1980s when it first surfaced. Over the years it has also become the scourge of suburban and rural areas and smaller-sized cities. As evi dence, the Chronicle in May reported the story of an infant caught in a custody fight between a crack-using mother and the woman she had given her child to. Since crack is still considered by health professionals and social ? workers as relatively new on the scene, little is known of the long term health affects the drug poses on infants born to crack-addicted mothers. Health and social workers agree, however, that a crack addicted woman giving birth could threaten her child's ability later in life to perform normally in some sit uations, such as classroom settings. Dr. Robert Dillard, professor of pediatrics at Bowman Gray School of Medicine and director of the neo natal unit at Forsyth Memorial Hos pital. said that of the 33 babies at any one time in the neo- natal unit at Forsyth, "three to five" of them are crack babies ? and an "overwhelm ing" number are black. There is no agency in Forsyth County that keeps records of the number of crack babies born each year, but Dillard said that the prob lem is acute. "Just from anecdotal evidence, there's a serious problem in the county," he said It's such a common problem, he said, that the hospital does not report crack babies to Social Ser vices "unless there is something quite pathologic or obvious. We don't refer the majority of the cases we identify," he said. Surprisingly, Dillard said, many mothers will admit that they had been using crack. The hospital social worker will determine if the case warrants repotting to social ser vices. The most serious problem that crack poses in the uterus is prema ture birth, which results in a less th an -normal birth weight and the inability of the immune system to affectively fight off disease, he said. While a baby born to an alcohol abusing mother has more immediate and detrimental effects, a "crack baby* can soon shake the immediate problems, Dillard said, but what poses the dilemma is how the child is affected later during adolescence. A premature baby usually sig nals that a mother is a drug user, Dillard said, and if doctors are sus picious, then a hospital social worker gets involved "We make it clear to the mother -that we're not policemen," he said. "We're only interested in the well being of the child. We won't call the police." Dillard said that if a woman admits to using crack but maintains a job and keeps her children in school, the woman will not be reported to the Department of Social Services. Instead, a hospital social worker may ask that a special nurse be provided to visit the woman's home. On the other hand, a mother who is homeless and is a heavy drug user will almost certainly be reported to social services, Dillard said. Forsyth Rates High in Teen Pregnancy from page ai pre-teenage category, 33 of the 36 pregnancies were to African Ameri cans. Nearly half of the 15- to 19 year-olds who became pregnant in Forsyth County had abortions, while 21 of the 33 black pre-teenagers chosc to give birth. Barbara Huberman, executive director of the North Carolina Coali tion on Adolescent Pregnancy (NCCAP), said that over the last 25 years the number of teen-age preg nancies has not shown much increase. Instead, she said, the trend is showing an increasing number of women who are choosing to give birth. Huberman said more youths are giving birth because today's women are not ostracized as much for becoming mothers at an early age. "It s more acceptable to be a single parent these days," she said. "They are not looked down upon as much, and opposition to having ahpftions gets a lot of "Mifl atten tion." Huberman said the high preg nancy rates run across the board, but blacks get most of the media atten tion because whites opt for abor tions. She noted that abortions are less acceptable in black families, citing that two-thirds of white teen agers have abortions compared to only one-third of black teen-agers. Althea Jones, a volunteer with Planned Parenthood of the Triad, said most black teen-agers decide to have the babies because of their tra ditional customs of the extended family. "We're taught to look after one another and take care of our own problems," she said. "Most black families support each other and try to keep it in the family." Huberman said North Carolina has one of the highest proportion of working mothers, thus leaving the children with a lot of free time. This "unsupervised time" is what Jones says helps contribute to the prob lem. "There is the absence of a father figure, and working mothers are trying to provide for the family," she said. They feel they need atten tion and something to identify with. Having a baby gives them some thing that will love them and they can give love back to." Throughout the state, there was a total of 769 pregnancies to 10- to 14-year-olds and 24,299 pregnancies to IS- to 19-year-okls, according to NCCAP. Joyce Wheeling, coordinator of the Adolescent Pregnancy Preven tion Council, said its goal is to off set the increasing number of preg nancies, especially among pre- teenagers. "It's a primary concern to pre vent adolescent pregnancy, but also to spread an awareness of it," Wheeling said. "Education is the key to prevention.'' In African-American communi- . ties, many teen-age women are already sexually active before they receive sex education, Jones said. "A lot of times the parents either were not equipped or just did n't talk about it," she said. "They thought that talking about it might encourage it, and if they didn't say anything about it, it wouldn't hap pen. But by the time they get to col lege, especially first generation col lege students, it's too late because some are already pregnant " Axioms like "it's all right for my son, but not my daughter," says Jones, has kept many young black men sheltered from responsibility. "This double standard is talring black men away from reality. They contributed to the pregnancy," she said. "If black men are taught (responsibility) from their mothers, we could eliminate a lot of this." " The Adolescent Pregnancy Pre vention Council is seeking the assis tance of parents, businessmen, min isters and all concerned citizens to meet July 13 at 3 p.m. at the Big Brothers/Big Sisters Office at 107 Westdale Ave. i TICKETS OA/ SALE NOW! August 2-7 ? Ttorc Tf van 50 Stars! A ? Sidney Poitier ? Delia Reese ? Harry Belafonte ? John Amos ? Clifton Davis ft Ja'Net DuBois ft Pam Grier ft Antonio Fargas ? Brock Peters ? Angela Bassett ? Phylicia Rashad ? Denise Nicholas ? Robert Guillaume ? Dick Anthony Williams ? Hattie Wilson ? Regina Taylor and many more! More than 82 performances by America's best Black theatre companies! Come meet the Stars and see the plays. Be a part of history by attending the 1993 National Black Theatre Festival. Call now (919) 723-7907 to order performance tickets. OPENING N1TE &ALA package includes dinner with the stars arid show ticket to opening production of "Celebrations: An African Odyssey." $100 or $85 seats available The N.C. Black Repertory Company *610 Coliseum Drive ? Winston-Salem, NC 27106 SPONSORS: R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company ? USAIr ? Planters Life Savers ? Sara Lee ? Wachovia ? NationsBank of the Carolines ? BBAT ? Integon Insurance ? Contract Office Furnishings ? Duke Power Compeny ? W-S Stouffer Hotel ? Mechanics A Farmers Bank ? City of Winston-Salem ? Greater W-S Chember of Commerce ? Forsyth County Tourism Dev. Authority ? The Marque Hotel ? N.C. Arts Council Theetre Arts Program ? National Endowment for the Arts Theater Program ? Winston- Seiem State University ? Pepsi-Cola Bottling of W-S ? Arts Council of Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Brenda Evans, a social work program manager for social ser vices, whose office investigates complaints of child abuse, said that from July 1992 to May of this year, there was a 37 percent rise in the number of drug-related cases over the previous 12 months. "We don't investigate every case where a parent is on drugs," she said. If the hospital contacts social services and says that a drug-abus ing woman is about to deliver, but that woman is living with her grand mother, said Evans, "we say that that grandmother is a stable enough force" in the household. In some cases* the mother is confronted with her problem and told to get treatment or risk losing custody of her child. Every effort is made to avoid removing the child from the parent, Evans said. Brown, the Step One counselor, said drugs are a serious problem among young African-American mothers. The girls who are here are a | mere fraction of who are out there," she said. She was critical of blacks who she said are notorious for not getting help earlier. \r "Historically, black people don't do appointments. It's the same thing with crack addicts. 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