Taking on the problems associated with an aging and declining population!
A Danish travel company is calling for Danes to have more sex
while they’re on holiday – to save the country. They even launched a competition
to encourage the people to take a break and conceive kids, as the birthrate is
now at its lowest in decades.
Spies Rejser Travel has promised three years of free baby
supplies and a child friendly holiday for a couple who can prove that they
conceived while on a Spies’ holiday. The travel company said it is trying to
help tackle the country’s low birth rate by encouraging couples to do it for
Denmark.
The birth rate in Denmark is currently the lowest it’s been in
27 years. Almost 58,000 children were born in 2012, but the present rate of 1.7
children per family is not enough to maintain the population.
Warning: Mildly Not Safe for Work/Children
Eva Lundgren, a spokeswoman for Spies, said that sexologists
believe one of the reasons for the low birth rate is that Danes are too busy to
have sex.
“Sex
specialists believe that Danes are too busy with their daily life and they need
to get away, so we hope we encourage people to take a break and have some
romance,” she told RT.
The thinking behind the initiative is that a couple’s desire
for each other increases while they are taking a break together.
Couples who enter the competition are sent a pregnancy test
after the holiday and if it comes up positive, they must send in a picture of
the test result to Spies as proof.
Entrants are given a list of romantic cities and the website
then asks women to enter the date of their last period so they can take a trip
when they are at their most fertile.
There are even useful tips for
increasing fertility such as “take advantage of gravity. Lie
down for at least 15 minutes after sex.” Men are also advised not to wear
tight pants “even if you think it looks good.”
A report published in February described the birth rate among
Danish women as “dangerously low” and found that one in five couples in Denmark
are childless.
“Many wait too
long to have children, creating a greater need for fertility treatments. There
is a need to raise awareness, as the problem is approaching epidemic
levels,” Soren Ziebe, a clinical supervisor at Rigshospitalet, wrote in the
report.
The study noted that in the 1970s the average Danish woman was
24 years-old when she gave birth to her first child. Today the age is 29, but a
greater number of women are waiting until they are over 35. As a result more and
more couples are relying on fertility treatments to conceive.
But do it for Denmark isn’t just about increasing the
birthrate and is also a bit of fun.
“What if you
already did your duty? Or what if your chance of conceiving a child isn’t so
high,” asks the advert, filming an old couple followed by two gay men.
“Well look at
it this way. It’s not just about winning. All the fun is in the
participation.”
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