CHICAGO - A surprising 80 per cent of teenage boys are using condoms the first time they have sex, a U.S. government survey finds. But another promising trend -- fewer teenagers having sex -- has levelled off.

Boys' condom use may mean they are taking more responsibility for contraception or they are protecting themselves from sexually transmitted diseases, experts say. Or, as one young man said, girls may be drawing the line.

"I'm not sure how much of this is guys thinking they need to use a condom or girls insisting they use a condom," said 17-year-old Olivier Vanasse of Princeton, N.J. "I'd be hesitant to give guys credit for coming up with this on their own."

The study, released Wednesday, is based on interviews with about 4,700 teenagers, ages 15 to 19, conducted from 2006 through 2010. It shows the percentage of boys who said they used condoms the first time they had sex climbed from 71 per cent in 2002 to a stunning 80 per cent in the new survey. In 1988, only 55 per cent of boys said they used a condom during their first sexual intercourse.

The survey suggests that condom use continues. Asked if they used a condom the most recent time they had sex in the preceding three months, 75 per cent of males said they did, an increase from 71 per cent in 2002.

"We don't think it's a stupid thing to do anymore," said Vanasse, a high school senior and staff writer for www.sexetc.org, a project of Rutgers University's Answer, a national sex education organization. "It's just accepted as common sense that you should be using a condom if you're going to be having sex."

Overall, about 43 per cent of girls and 42 per cent of boys report ever having vaginal intercourse, a rate that is statistically unchanged since 2002 following a steady decline since 1988.

The report explodes myths about teenage sex, said Bill Albert, spokesman for the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy.

"There's the notion that all teenagers are doing it, and that's not the case. In fact, less than half said they've had sex," Albert said. "And there's no gender gap between the teen boys and the teen girls. There's a myth that guys are out on the prowl, and that's not supported by this data."

Less sex and more contraception are driving down teen births, he said. The U.S. teen birth rate in 2009 -- 39 births per 1,000 females -- was nearly 40 per cent lower than the peak in 1991. It's still a dramatically higher birth rate than in Western Europe, where birth control is less expensive and more accessible to teens.

The new study contains clearly encouraging news. For the first time, there was no racial difference in the percentage of girls reporting they had had sex. In the past, black females were more likely than whites to be sexually experienced.

"That's due to a drop in black females who are sexually experienced," said the study's lead author, Gladys Martinez, a demographer for the government's National Center for Health Statistics.

Other findings:

--Teens were less likely to have had sex if they lived with both parents, if their mothers hadn't been teen moms themselves, or if their mothers were college graduates.

--Most teens -- 70 per cent of girls and 56 per cent of boys -- had their first sex with someone with whom they were "going steady."

--A minority -- 16 per cent of girls and 28 per cent of boys -- had their first sex with someone they just met or with whom they were "just friends."

Some teenage girls are trying newer contraceptive methods, even the first time they have sex. A small but growing proportion of girls -- six per cent in the new survey compared with two per cent in 2002 -- reported using long-acting hormonal methods such as injectable birth control, contraceptive patches or the new contraceptive ring.

The finding on teenage boys' condom use heartened proponents of sex education.

"Boys have really stepped up to the plate in the last 20 years. We've included them in the conversation about teen sex and have seen them as able to be responsible actors, and they've done it for us," said Linda Lindberg, a senior research associate for the Guttmacher Institute. "There's been some shift from the double standard of teaching boys not to ask for sex and teaching girls to say no."

She said it was too soon to see any effect from the Obama administration's move away from abstinence-only sex education to programs that teach pregnancy prevention.