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Danish women keeping their tops on

TheCopenhagenPost
July 21st, 2015


This article is more than 9 years old.

Bare breasts are vanishing from Danish beaches

Danish women are covering up at the beach (Photo: Chad Riley)

Only four percent of Danish women say that they hit the beach topless always or most of the time. According to a Megafon poll conducted for Politiken and TV 2, 85 percent say that they never or rarely bathe topless.

Although fewer Danish women are going topless, the public at large has no problem with the practice, with 66 percent of Danes saying that it was fine with them if women shed their bikini tops.

“People have no problem with women showing their breasts, but women do not seem to want to do it,” Niels Ulrik Sørensen at the Centre for Youth Research at Aalborg University told Politiken. “There doesn’t seem to be a rise in prudishness as it pertains to nudity, more an emergence of a narrow-mindedness in relation to the deficiencies of one’s own body.”

Covering up, young and old
Even the generation responsible for the feminist movement covers itself at the beach these days. The study showed that about half of Danish women between 40 and 69-years-old bathed topless at one time in their life, but no longer do so.

READ MORE: Topless women a rare sight in city pools

The tendency to cover up is strongest among younger women, where three in five women between 18 and 39-years-old have never went topless on a beach.


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A survey carried out by Megafon for TV2 has found that 71 percent of parents have handed over children to daycare in spite of them being sick.

Moreover, 21 percent of those surveyed admitted to medicating their kids with paracetamol, such as Panodil, before sending them to school.

The FOLA parents’ organisation is shocked by the findings.

“I think it is absolutely crazy. It simply cannot be that a child goes to school sick and plays with lots of other children. Then we are faced with the fact that they will infect the whole institution,” said FOLA chair Signe Nielsen.

Pill pushers
At the Børnehuset daycare institution in Silkeborg a meeting was called where parents were implored not to bring their sick children to school.

At Børnehuset there are fears that parents prefer to pack their kids off with a pill without informing teachers.

“We occasionally have children who that they have had a pill for breakfast,” said headteacher Susanne Bødker. “You might think that it is a Panodil more than a vitamin pill, if it is a child who has just been sick, for example.”

Parents sick and tired
Parents, when confronted, often cite pressure at work as a reason for not being able to stay at home with their children.

Many declare that they simply cannot take another day off, as they are afraid of being fired.

Allan Randrup Thomsen, a professor of virology at KU, has heavily criticised the parents’ actions, describing the current situation as a “vicious circle”.

“It promotes the spread of viruses, and it adds momentum to a cycle where parents are pressured by high levels of sick-leave. If they then choose to send the children to daycare while they are still recovering, they keep the epidemic going in daycares, and this in turn puts a greater burden on the parents.”