The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports use of a number of family-planning services by women in their prime child-bearing years dropped across the board in the late 2000s even as the median age for beginning sexual activity dropped to just past 17.
Among the 62 million women ages 15 to 44, 70% used family planning services such as birth control, pregnancy tests and emergency contraception, down from 73% in 2002, according to the latest National Survey of Family Growth (PDF). Use of birth control fell to 33% from 34% of women; birth control counseling fell to 17% from 19%; and even use of the cervical cancer screening Pap test fell to 60% from 64%, which reduced use of that life-saving cancer prevention test to levels not seen since the 1980s.