Pediatrics Journal Confirms That Abstinence Education Works

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An article on abstinence-only programs appearing in the Feb. 2010 issue of Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine reports that "Only about a third of sixth- and seventh-graders who completed an abstinence-focused program started having sex within the next two years, researchers found. Nearly half of the students who attended other classes, including ones that combined information about abstinence and contraception, became sexually active. "

The authors concluded that "Theory-based abstinence-only interventions may have an important role in preventing adolescent sexual involvement."

We can all agree that the fact that any sixth--ninth graders are having sex is unacceptable, but a decrease from 50% to 30% is significant. Why aren't all child advocates rejoicing at this good news?

Last year, I wrote about Janet Rosenbaum's analysis of "virginity pledges." What was interesting in that public debate was that many critics conflated "virginity pledges" with abstinence education, treating them as if they were the same. Although virginity pledges are part of some abstinence curricula, they are not part of all abstinence curricula, and, of course, virginity pledges do not constitute abstinence curricula.

Comprehensive sex ed proselytes, giddy about Janet Rosenbaum's findings, overlooked this discovery of Rosenbaum's:

[T]eens who take virginity pledges do delay sexual activity until an average age of 21 (compared to about age 17 for the average American teen).

 

They also seemed not to notice that "Those who had taken a pledge had 0.11 fewer past-year sexual partners," a finding which a clearly unbiased Rosenbaum dismissed, saying:

'[T]his modest difference is unlikely to affect sexually transmitted disease risk, because pledgers do not differ in the average number of lifetime partners or age of sexual initiation [21.23 for pledgers and 20.73 for non-pledgers] or in empirical sexually transmitted disease prevalence.'

 

Apparently to Rosenbaum, fewer sexual partners between the ages of 15--20 is unimportant if sexually transmitted disease risk is not reduced. I suspect many parents may disagree with her.

Some theorize that this delay is a result of religious faith since the study participants--both pledgers and non-plegers--had similar conservative religious convictions (according to Rosenbaum, "40% were born-again believers"). Evidently, the proponents of early sexualization of children find religious faith so objectionable that they refuse to acknowledge the real possibility that faith may provide the solution to the problem of teen sex. http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/12/30/virginity.pledges/

Another interesting fact from the Rosenbaum study reported by the mainstream media, is that "non-pledgers," meaning those who did not take virginity pledges were "2.31%" more likely to have "been paid for sex" than those who took virginity pledges. Make of that what you will.

Additional good news about abstinence education comes from The Heritage Foundation in an article titled "The Case for Maintaining Abstinence Education Funding":

  • A study of "seventh graders in northern Virginia, reported that, one year after the program, students who received abstinence education were half as likely as non-participants to initiate sexual activity."

     

  • "A 2008 Heritage report analyzed 21 different studies done on abstinence-based education programs. It found that in 16 of the 21 reports there were statistically significant positive results in delaying early sexual activity and initiation."

 

Critics of abstinence programs point to a Mathematica Policy Research report released in April 2007 that compared the behavior of students in abstinence programs with that of students who were in comprehensive sex ed programs as evidence of the failure of abstinence programs. That study revealed the following:

  • Kids in both groups (abstinence and control groups) were knowledgeable about the risks of having sex without using a condom or other form of protection.

     

  • Condom use was not high in either group.

     

  • By the end of the study, when the average child was just shy of 17, half of both groups had remained abstinent.

     

  • The sexually active teenagers had sex the first time at about age 15.

     

  • More than a third of both groups had two or more partners.

 

This study, however, also found this:

  • A greater number of students in abstinence programs correctly identified STDs than did students in control groups.

     

  • A greater number of students in abstinence programs reported correctly that birth control pills do not prevent STDs than did students in control groups.

 

After reading this report, Martha Kempner of the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States declared that, "Abstinence-only was an experiment and it failed." Curiously, Ms. Kempner looked at the abstinence programs analyzed in this study, which have largely the same results as comprehensive sex ed programs--except that they better prepare students with a knowledge of STD-prevention--and she declares that only abstinence programs are failures.

I would argue that if abstinence programs are deemed a failure and worthy of defunding, then comprehensive sex ed programs, which in some studies have virtually the same results, should also be deemed a failure and defunded.

So far, the research seems to suggest that overall abstinence education works just as well--if not better--than comprehensive sex ed.

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Rashi18's picture

An earlier article reported that the study involved Catholic School students . Try selecting public school students in a broader based study. Let's make things real by selecting real students in schools where the teen pregnancy rate is high to begin with and stop playing games.

gracieallan's picture

Sixteen out of 21 studies support the idea that abstinence education works. Opposition to abstinence education now is about ideology, not about facts.

MrBook's picture

delaying sexual activity does not help unless it corresponds to a drop in the rate of unwanted pregnancy and STD transmission rates.

If the programs include both abstinence education and comprehensive discussions of birth control / STD prevention then it is a comprehensive sex ed program.

SolarSanitizer's picture

"Just say no to sex , kids .... Here is a pack of condoms ."

Gimme a freakin' break.

The plural of 'anecdote' is not 'data'.

heathen57@gmail.com's picture

of fundamentalists and conservatives are things that simple.

The abstinence that you seem to promote has not worked in the 3000+ years since it was initiated. You have failed to stop unmarried pregnancy with your threats of hell-fire, damning, shaming, and harassment. Purity pledges and the like have little effect on the number of pregnancies and STDs. And your simplistic version of comprehensive sex education ("here is a pack of condoms") is also way off base.

If you want to see real comprehensive sex education program in action, check out the Nederlands where their teens have sex as much as ours do, but with 1/10 the pregnancies and STDs.

"Politicians should wear uniforms like NASCAR drivers so we can identify their corporate sponsors" - Robin Williams

SolarSanitizer's picture

You make an arguable point: "If you want to see real comprehensive sex education program in action, check out the Nederlands where their teens have sex as much as ours do, but with 1/10 the pregnancies and STDs."

Well, according to Brenda Almond, Emeritus Professor at the University of Hull, "[M]ake no mistake: despite what the Government might think, being brought up in a stable, domestic environment is by far the best way a child can learn about the importance of fidelity, restraint and personal responsibility”, she writes.

Prof Almond then exposes the fallacy that the Netherlands has low teenage pregnancy rates because of its explicit approach to sex education.

She says it is actually because Holland supports stable family life and does not ‘celebrate’ having children outside of marriage.

The Professor also points out that divorce rates are much lower in Holland and the Dutch benefits system, “which is generous in other respects, does not reward teenage mothers with large handouts and accommodation”.

Who is being simplistic now?

The plural of 'anecdote' is not 'data'.

heathen57@gmail.com's picture

family life. After all every time that the Religious Right demands something be censored, or that someone's rights be taken away, it is always for the family (think of the children).

No, the woman who you refer to, a professor in England, has no real standing on what goes on in the Netherlands. Instead she uses the unsubstantiated claims that it is all because the parents instill all the ideals of fidelity, restraint, and personal responsibility. Isn't that what all these Christian parents supposedly instill into their young? Then why would it suddenly work there and not here?

The answer has to be in part at least what they are taught from a young age. Sex isn't a big mystery to them, neither is it a taboo that requires them to experiment just to find out what it is. It has been explained and they understand that it is a part of life. Much like nudity. Here people scream about it, The FCC doles out fines because of it, and children are kept in the dark about it. Then they will offer their soul for a chance to see a bare breast. The children there see such in advertisements, on TV and such. They have no reason to do anything to see a breast. They already know, and it is just a part of life.

Now show how that has nothing to do with the differences in the two countries in regard to pregnancies and std's.

"Politicians should wear uniforms like NASCAR drivers so we can identify their corporate sponsors" - Robin Williams

MrBook's picture

If the program does not lead to a decrease in the incidence of STDs then it is not effective, even if it delays sexual activity.

The point of comprehensive sex education is not to stop people from having sex (because that goal is impossible) it is to reduce STD infection rates and unwanted pregnancies.

The ideal case is for each person to be in an intimate relationship with one other person at a given time, after both parties have been tested for STDs. That ideal will never be reached, so STD prevention techniques have to be taught to everyone. Further teaching “don’t have sex until you are in a relationship / married ” ignores the need for education regarding the use of birth control technologies… which are important even in a committed relationship / marriage .

SolarSanitizer's picture

Question 1:

How is sex ed better than abstinence at preventing STDs?

Bonus question:

How do young women get pregnant without having sex ? Is teaching the use of birth-control techniques as a social more really more effective than teaching abstinence as a social more in America?
(Hint: America, with all of its sex ed dogma, shows another 3% increase in teen pregnancy rates as of Feb 10 2010.)

Try to reset your mind away from " government programs" and toward 'social mores'. Gov't programs, on the whole, are crap.

The plural of 'anecdote' is not 'data'.

MrBook's picture

"How is sex ed better than abstinence at preventing STDs? "

Because people want to have sex ... millions of years of evolution have made that drive very strong (I know that my limited sexual activity during that time was due to a lack of opportunity and not due to a desire to be abstinent). Thus just teaching "hey don't have sex" doesn't cover it... you have to teach how to protect oneself if sex is to be had.

"Is teaching the use of birth-control techniques as a social more really more effective than teaching abstinence as a social more in America?"

Yes, because knowledge of birth control is applicable throughout ones reproductive years (not just when one is a teen). Abstinence education does not help someone in an intimate relationship prevent unwanted pregnancies.

"Try to reset your mind away from " government programs" and toward 'social mores'."

Why? I'm not about to shame someone for having sex due to arbitrary mores.

You may not realize it, but sex is fun... and, with the proper precautions, can be safely enjoyed. To treat it as some big super secret thing benefits nobody.

"Gov't programs, on the whole, are crap."

I'm sure that the men and women in our armed forces appreciate that sentiment.

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