Friends explores issues among a group of 30-somethings
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Teenagers' sex education is assisted by watching TV series such as the US sitcom Friends, according to a study.
Researchers said watching or discussing a show with an adult reinforced or
clarified the lessons carried by TV.
A Friends episode in which Rachel becomes pregnant after her former partner Ross's condom fails was watched by 1.6 million 12-to 17-year-olds.
Teenagers who watched or discussed it with an adult were about twice as likely to recall the issues involved.
Researchers interviewed about 500 teenagers shortly after
the episode aired in October 2001.
Sexual attitudes
Viewers recalled the lessons six months later, according
to the study in the November edition of the US journal
Paediatrics.
The research was part of a study by California-based research group Rand into the role TV plays in teenagers'
development of sexual attitudes and behaviour.
Rebecca Collins, author of the report, said: "We've always known that teenagers get useful information
about sex from factual reporting and advice-oriented media,
but now we know they can get this information from
entertainment television programmes as well.
"When parents and kids watch television together, a
programme may present an opportunity to discuss issues the
children might not raise on their own."