Sex-ed site reaching thousands, NGO says
Mon, 21 December 2015 ppp
Sen David
A
lack of knowledge about sex is posing a risk to the health and
education of adolescents, according to the Ministry of Education, which
has created an online program to help better inform and equip the young
people who make up 60 per cent of Cambodia’s population.
Developed
in partnership with NGO OneWorld UK, the pilot program “Smart Youth
Good Future” was rolled-out in 2014 across 24 schools in eight provinces
as well as in Phnom Penh, with the findings from its one-year
implementation released by the ministry on Friday.
Kaing
Sanary, a project officer on Smart Youth Good Future, said that the
first year of the program, which has reached almost 10,000 Cambodians in
and outside of schools and has seen nearly 20,000 questions submitted,
has yielded positive results.
“[Young
people] can learn directly online, sending their questions via mobile
or computer and then the doctor or experts will reply in secret to
them,” she explained, noting that modules from the program have also
been made available to garment factory workers in Phnom Penh.
Cambodia is the sixth country in the world to implement the program and the first in Southeast Asia.
Approximately
32 per cent of Cambodians are under 15 years of age, and among the 13-
to 15-year-olds surveyed during the pilot, some 13 per cent are already
sexually active. Despite this, there is little knowledge about sexual or
reproductive health, say officials from the ministry who have sponsored
the e-learning system specifically designed to redress this gap.
“They
are very young, but some of them are in a hurry to have sex which can
affect their education,” said Kim Sethany, secretary at the Ministry of
Education, Youth and Sports. “That is why the project aims to inform
them via the internet and mobile phone services.”
The
project consists of a skills curriculum and web-based
question-and-answer system that can be accessed via a range of devices,
with the stated aim of engaging young people on subjects such as
contraception, sex before marriage, unsafe abortion and sexually
transmitted diseases in a non-judgmental, confidential and accurate
manner.
As
Sethany explained, such an outlet is all the more crucial given
Cambodia’s cultural context in which young people rarely dare to seek
related advice from professionals, putting young girls in particular at
risk.
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