Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Parents tell FM to scrap sex survey

- BY ADELE MERSON

NICOLA Sturgeon is facing calls from Scotland’s largest parents’ organisati­on to ditch a controvers­ial survey asking teenagers about their sexual experience­s.

The national health and wellbeing census, created by the Scottish Government, has been declared “not fit for purpose” by Eileen Prior, the chief executive of Connect.

The Guardian revealed Ms Prior has written to the first minister and Education Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville asking them to withdraw the survey “until it takes a children’s rights approach, which has clearly been missing”.

In particular, the boss of the parents’ organisati­on raised concerns around pupils’ privacy and informed consent, including how the data will be used.

It comes after reports the anonymous questionna­ire was not confidenti­al, with young people asked to fill in their unique Scottish candidate number.

At least eight local authoritie­s – including Aberdeen and Aberdeensh­ire – are understood to have refused to take part in the controvers­ial survey.

Dundee, Fife and Perth and Kinross are among the councils who have chosen to distribute it.

The Tele revealed the questions that were to be featured in the survey a month ago.

And our readers overwhelmi­ngly backed scrapping the survey in an online poll with more than 80% of respondent­s saying that children should not be asked to take part.

Pupils as young as 14 will be asked questions around their sex lives, which features questions like: “How much, if any, sexual experience have you had?”

The subsequent multiple choice answers include “oral sex” and “vaginal or anal sex”.

Asked about concerns around the survey during First Minister’s Questions last month, Ms Sturgeon said her government would not withdraw it.

She told MSPs the alternativ­e was to “bury our heads in the sand and pretend that young people are not exposed to the issues or the pressures that we know they are exposed to”.

The SNP leader confirmed the questionna­ires have been “specially designed so that the informatio­n provided by children and young people is used for statistica­l and research purposes only and that ensures any results of the research or resulting statistics will not be made available in a form which identifies individual children and young people”.

A Scottish Government spokesman told The Guardian: “Parents/carers and children and young people are informed of how their data will be used in advance of any taking part in the census and they can decide to opt out if they wish.”

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