4 major dangers of college students living together
For college students who have just grown up, life has just begun, and many adult problems are beyond their ability to cope with and bear. Especially for girls, early cohabitation and exposure to sex life will have extremely negative effects on their bodies and psychology. Clinically, in addition to contraceptive failure and unintended pregnancy, the harms caused by college students living together too early and having unsafe and unhygienic sex include the following common short- and long-term harms.
1. Infected with sexually transmitted diseases:
I don’t know what’s wrong with today’s college students. Changing partners is like changing clothes. If you change one partner, you can live with the other person, and sex life is inevitable. As a result, I didn't get any benefits, I got bruises all over my body, I even contracted sexually transmitted diseases, and my future became increasingly difficult.
2. Academic impact:
Due to unintended pregnancy, abortion, surgery, sexually transmitted diseases, and fear of contracting sexually transmitted diseases, most college students who have improper sexual lives have a heavy mental burden and cannot concentrate on their studies, resulting in poor grades, neglected studies, and a waste of youth. .
3. Loss of sexual function and fertility:
In clinical practice, it can often be seen that due to fear, lack of sexual hygiene knowledge, and lack of financial ability, college students do not receive timely treatment or incomplete treatment after contracting sexually transmitted diseases, resulting in chronic infection or residual disease. Sequelae, affecting future sexual function and fertility. There are also some people with unintended pregnancies who are afraid of being known and go to some irregular clinics to have abortions. Complications such as infection after surgery can also lead to infertility in the future.
4. Increased risk of cervical cancer:
In recent years, it has been found that the age of onset of cervical cancer has increased earlier. The results of scientific surveys show that certain viral infections of the cervix (HPV virus) can induce cervical cancer. Risk factors for cervical cancer include early cohabitation, sexual intercourse, early childbearing, multiple sexual partners, unrestrained sexual intercourse and sexual impurity.
Let college students be adequately "sexually prepared"
With the opening up of society, the exchange of Eastern and Western cultures, and the changes in sexual concepts, today's college students no longer "talk about sex." According to recent survey data, more than 60% of people believe that premarital sex is understandable. Therefore, it is imperative to open up the topic of sex to them in a timely manner during college and carry out publicity and education on healthy sexual knowledge and reproductive health.