With China's rapid development and changing social values, young people's needs for sexual and reproductive health information and services are growing as behaviors change.
When the "cultural revolution" broke out in 1966, major national newspapers called on the 600 million Chinese to join the "great movement of smashing the feudal, the bourgeois and the revisionist ideas".
Shao Pei and his wife Zhou Min, both only children, are considering moving to another neighborhood in Beijing with a higher population of children. That's because their only daughter, nicknamed Xiaoxiao, is turning 2 years old soon and will need to make friends. The couple, in their early 30s, live in a high-end apartment building in the capital's expensive Central Business District, densely populated with young elite white-collar workers but few children.