| Abstract |  This article presents  findings  from a survey conducted in Kenya in 1985 of the reproductive  health knowledge,  attitudes,  and practices  among more than 3,000 unmarried  Kenyan youth, students and nonstudents,  between the  ages of 12 and 19. The survey was designed to elicit information  that would be useful in gauging the kinds of  problems  Kenyan adolescents  face in order to design programs  that meet their needs. The study shows that although  a solid majority  of adolescents  appear to have received information  on reproductive  health, the quality of the information is generally low. Fewer than 8 percent could correctly  identify  the fertile  period in a woman's menstrual  cycle. A substantial  proportion  of the population  surveyed,  more than 50 percent,  is sexually active, having initiated  intercourse  some time between 13 and 14 years of age, on average. In spite of a general disapproval  of premarital  sex  (but approval of the use of contraceptives  among the sexually active), most of the sexually active population-89  percent-have never used contraceptives.  The many contradictions  between  attitudes  and practices pose serious  questions and demonstrate  the need to reexamine  the programs (and policies) that provide access to reproductive  health services to adolescents in Keny |