Canadian parents face multiple barriers to providing their children with reliable and culturally appropriate sex education, according to research published in Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare from the University of Alberta. “My motivation is to deeply understand parents’ experiences and what holds them back, and build a system to empower families rather than just leave them to navigate all these conversations by themselves,” says principal investigator Neelam Punjani, who undertook the research as part of her postdoctoral fellowship and is now an assistant professor in the U of A’s Faculty of Nursing.
This article was originally published on MedicalXpress.com

