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ARTICLE |

Sex Education in Schools— A Polemic

Richard R. Parlour, MD
JAMA. 1969;209(6):942. doi:10.1001/jama.1969.03160190062029.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:—  Few things are as damaging to a reputation as pretending to be expert in areas where one is clearly not. The medical profession adds tarnish to its public image when it invades the sphere of morality, making authoritative pronouncements about the moral aspects of such things as venereal disease, abortions, and now sex education as in the May 12, 1969, issue of JAMA, and the resolution of the Jefferson County Medical Society reported in AMA News on the same date, and others.As serious scientific men we should look at the Scandinavian evidence and see that the advantages of sex education in public schools are by no means clear-cut and the problems are complex. What is the proven way to teach sex in public schools? Who are the qualified teachers? Physicians as a whole have not distinguished themselves in their understanding of sexual matters; what difference does

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