Following decade-long decline, U.S. teen pregnancy rate increases as both births and abortions rise
Gap Between Blacks and Hispanics Has Closed, But Rates Among Both Groups Remain Significantly Higher Than Among Non-Hispanic Whites.
For the first time in more than a decade, the nation’s teen pregnancy rate rose 3% in 2006, reflecting increases in teen birth and abortion rates of 4% and 1%, respectively.
These new data from the Guttmacher Institute are especially noteworthy because they provide the first documentation of what experts have suspected for several years, based on trends in teens’ contraceptive use—that the overall teen pregnancy rate would increase in the mid-2000s following steep declines in the 1990s and a subsequent plateau in the early 2000s. The significant drop in teen pregnancy rates in the 1990s was overwhelmingly the result of more and better use of contraceptives among sexually active teens. However, this decline started to stall out in the early 2000s, at the same time that sex education programs aimed exclusively at promoting abstinence—and prohibited by law from discussing the benefits of contraception—became increasingly widespread and teens’ use of contraceptives declined.
Join Our Mailing List
Religious Declaration
Add your voice to the more than 5,000 religious leaders who have endorsed a new vision for sexual health and justice.
EndorseFaithful Voices Network

As a person of faith, I support sexual health, education and justice. Take the Pledge
Pastors for Sexual Health. Prophets for Sexual Justice.
The Religious Institute's mission is to change the way America understands the relationship of sexuality and religion.
Join the Network
Join us! The Religious Institute serves a network of clergy, religious educators, theologians, ethicists, and people of faith committed to sexual and social justice.
Join Us