“We will soon inform all students about this decision via their schools,” Deputy Prime Minister General Chatchai Sarikulya said on the weekend.
The decision was reached at a meeting of the committee on preventing teen pregnancy and solving related problems held last Friday.
Chatchai said the committee also assigned its provincial subcommittees to urgently promote sex education and life skills.
“We have also asked the Interior Ministry to consider passing ministerial regulations that will boost local administrative bodies’ capabilities in teen-pregnancy prevention,” he said.
He added that the Public Health Ministry was also nudged to set up centres to monitor teen pregnancies for efficient and timely analyses.
“The Public Health Ministry will need to efficiently provide counselling on semi-permanent contraception to teenagers who have just given birth to their babies or experienced miscarriage,” Chatchai said.