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Sex and Relationships

Unprotected Sex: Abstinence Education's Main Accomplishment

By Marie Cocco, Washington Post Writers Group. Posted July 2, 2009.


Teens are having more condomless sex than they did in the 1990s. It's time for science-based sex ed, not moralizing.
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WASHINGTON -- It hardly seems worth mentioning that the search for role models of sexual rectitude has gone pretty badly lately. That famous poster of Farrah Fawcett -- her golden locks tumbling around her shoulders and her gleaming smile offering a girl-next-door counterpoint to the suggestiveness of her red swimsuit -- sure makes it look as though, by comparison, the 1970s were an era of wholesomeness. They weren't.

It was about then that social conservatives -- fed up with sex, drugs, rock 'n' roll, divorce, Roe v. Wade, women surging into the work force and who knows what else -- began organizing politically to stamp out all this threatening change. They failed. But eventually they did succeed in imposing their prescription -- abstinence-only sex education that studies have repeatedly shown doesn't work -- on the one group of sexually active people most in need of hard information and least likely to respond to harangues: teenagers.

It is widely known that teenage birth and pregnancy rates, which dropped dramatically between 1991 and 2005, are now climbing. By tracking changes in reported contraceptive use among sexually active high-school students, researchers at Columbia University and the Alan Guttmacher Institute, which studies sexual health, have identified as the leading culprit a drop in the use of birth control -- specifically condoms. The team studied trends in teen sexual activity and contraceptive use between 1991 and 2007. During most of this period, the level of sexual activity reported by teenagers in routine surveys overseen by the Centers for Disease Control remained largely unchanged. But during a crucial period -- identified in the study as between 1991 and 2003 -- the use of condoms rose dramatically, climbing from 46.2 percent in 1991 to 63.0 percent in 2003. Then a perceptible decline in the use of condoms began, with 61.5 percent of students reporting condom use in 2007. "These behavioral trends are consistent with the 2006 and 2007 increases in the teen birth rate," the study published in the July issue of the Journal of Adolescent Health says. "They may well portend further increases in 2008."

The decline in contraceptive use may cheer those who have promoted faith-inspired school curriculums that refuse to even mention birth control and, in some cases, specifically emphasize that condoms can fail. True enough.

But now we have sad and clear evidence that political foolishness among adults is leading to foolish and harmful behavior among kids. Who could reasonably want more teen pregnancies, more abortions among teenagers, more unmarried mothers, more babies born with greater health risks and with the sorely limited economic prospects that burden the children of young, single mothers? No one would dare promote such a policy. Yet these are the results of our recent national sex-education policy, which was based on religious faith, not science, and put political gamesmanship ahead of public health.

President Barack Obama's budget would eliminate funding for abstinence-only education programs that show no results in changing teenagers' behavior. That's a proper step, but only a first one. The same researchers who documented the drop in condom use link the decline in part to waning public concern about transmission of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The clear increase in the proportion of teenagers using condoms came during years when public health and media messages about the dangers of HIV were at a height. The more recent trends, the researchers write, "may suggest faltering of HIV prevention efforts among U.S. youth." That is a dire warning of tragically diminished futures and early deaths among a generation that shouldn't be condemned to such suffering.

In the past few months, we've experienced near hysteria over swine flu and almost constant media attention to scares about tainted food. These are genuine health hazards -- but they aren't necessarily deadly, nor do they affect nearly as many people in the United States and around the world as does AIDS. The difference, of course, is that you get HIV from having sex or using drugs intravenously, not from unwittingly eating a bad burger or sitting next to a flu carrier.

You can argue, based on hard data, that when it comes to teenagers and sex, good policy and genuine leadership get better results than moralizing or ignoring signals that an upsurge in HIV infections may emerge. The tragic lesson of the earliest days of the AIDS pandemic is that squeamishness is no substitute for common sense.

Marie Cocco's e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com.

(c) 2009, Washington Post Writers Group


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See more stories tagged with: sex, teens, hiv, condoms, abstinence only, stis, safe sex, teen sex, unprotected sex

Marie Cocco is a prize-winning syndicated columnist on political and cultural topics for The Washington Post Writers Group. She is a frequent commentator on national TV and radio shows.

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Safe sex
Posted by: stdsgirl on Jul 2, 2009 1:39 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whatever. We need SEX-ED. I just found out the largest HIV dating&support site Positivefish. com. It has more than 500,000 members!
OMG! Why so many guys and girls on the site are very sexy? Why so many people infect HIV?

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Don't judge by the labels but instead by the content.
Posted by: maxpayne on Jul 2, 2009 3:16 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is nothing wrong with abstinence just as there is nothing wrong with safe sex. Both ideas need to be taken seriously and utilized. While I would prefer abstinence, I don't see anything wrong with getting the teenage kiddies to have safe sex since it would involve more true personal responsibility. Funny how the rightwing goes haywire on "personal responsibility" and yet does everything to take it away.

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» It doesn't work Posted by: Ahimsa
Where's this data?
Posted by: floridahank on Jul 2, 2009 3:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The article stated, "You can argue, based on hard data, that when it comes to teenagers and sex, good policy and genuine leadership get better results than moralizing or ignoring signals that an upsurge in HIV infections may emerge."

This is a strong statement and I'd like to
see where the facts are taken from.

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Real problem is misinformation is protected speech
Posted by: Moonray on Jul 2, 2009 4:28 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why not cut to the chase? The abstinence debacle stems largely from allowing religious groups to spread misinformation in schools. But we also should address the much larger issue of religious groups and others being allowed to use government programs and government-regulated mass media (such as radio and TV networks) to spread misinformation, fear and hate across the nation and around the world. As long as this continues, real progress will be impossible.

Our First Amendment as now interpreted is increasingly toxic to our society. Hate-mongers and religious charlatans thrive on it. War-mongering is a full-time job for hundreds of right-wing broadcasters. Scare-mongering and fraud are a full-time job for hundreds of religious broadcasters. No wonder our country just doesn't work anymore.

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No shit.
Posted by: pdecarlo on Jul 2, 2009 4:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Was this article even necessary for this audience?

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OK, people, try to form a rational thought here
Posted by: aislinnluv on Jul 2, 2009 4:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
whoever said "ignorance is bliss" used too many letters. ignorance is BS. our children (and i mean that literally; children are having sex, not only teenagers) need pertinent, factual information presented in a form that will engage them, not turn them off, not make them titter. insufficient knowledge can change the course of your life in ways you aren't prepared to handle. while i believe that every parent has the responsibility to teach his children about sex and its consequences, we all know that many parents choose to ignore that responsibility. given that reality, i believe the schools (public and private) should be required to give comprehensive sex education, starting at age 9 or 10. this would need to include those annoying dolls that simulate the behavior of real babies, with some sort of data recorder to make a record of how well the student parent cared for the "baby". poor care would result in very specific graphic presentations of what happens when you fail to feed or change diapers, or what injuries result from physical abuse. students need honest information about ALL the possible stds they could contract through unprotected sex. AIDS is not the only one, and many of the others can have devastating effects. i doubt any of us want our children or teenagers to engage in sexual activity but it was ever so. impulse control has to be cultivated and even many adults have little or none, so it is better to give our children the knowledge with which to protect themselves than have to deal later with disease or unwanted pregnancy.

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Not Mentioned
Posted by: jmmartin on Jul 2, 2009 4:47 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The unstated source of our reluctance to provide science-based sex education in our schools is the church, which poisons everything. Religions are literally anti-human. By making sex dirty and something that should only be done for procreative purposes, religions simply ignore human nature. Kids will do what comes naturally, so trying to impose unnatural strictures upon their behavior -- abstinance only -- makes no sense. Religion is anti-human and anti-natural. This should be obvious, since religion is by definition supernatural. These people will not teach their children about sex at home, unless negatively, so it must be done in the public arena. That means schools.

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» Anti-human? Posted by: lsmart
» RE: Anti-human? eventually Posted by: wagnerrocks@gmail.com
Abstinence works just fine in fantasyland
Posted by: MT512 on Jul 2, 2009 7:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Who could reasonably want more teen pregnancies, more abortions among teenagers, more unmarried mothers, more babies born with greater health risks and with the sorely limited economic prospects that burden the children of young, single mothers?"

I think they just don't see it that way. If more teenagers promise to abstain, the religious right succeeds. That's all they need. They want the symbolism, the ceremony, the string rings or the daughters promising to remain Dad's property until God sends a good man to take ownership.

If the statistics are then changed by a good number of those teenagers breaking the promises (surprise) and having unprotected sex and getting diseases and pregnancies and abortions, those are simply the failings of individuals straying from the path.

I'm sure that in their mind, "abstinence" works very well. It is irrelevant to them that so little abstinence is actually taking place.

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Remember the sitcom
Posted by: willymack on Jul 2, 2009 8:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Married with hildren"?
Ted Bundy's wife: "I want sex"
Ted: "You mean WITH somebody?"
Too bad a lack of intellgence isn't directly proportional to sterlity; the dumber you are, the more likely that you can't procreate.
The next best thing is EDUCATION, something sadly lacking in a nation of proud, arrogant ignoramuses.
Of course, this is being resisted by religion-besotted nitwits and their stooges, the rethugs.

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» RE: emember the sitcom Posted by: truthteller
» RE: emember the sitcom Posted by: willymack
The fundies are getting what they want
Posted by: truthteller on Jul 2, 2009 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Causing more unprotected sex is just what these hateful and repressed moralists want. They either don't want teens having sex, or they want them to catch STD's and have unwanted pregnancies as punishment for their "sin".

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Ironic
Posted by: JSquercia on Jul 2, 2009 9:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find somewhat ironic that Bristol Palin who is LIVING PROOF that Abstinence only has recently become a spokesperson for it . Initially she had admitted that it was unrealistic and other methods should be taught

Yes it is true that the ONLY 100% safe method of Birth Control is Abstinence . However the spirit is willing but the Flesh is weak and for those times an alternative is needed . It is unfortunate that many religious leaders would seem to hold the idea that those engaging in illicit sex should be PUNISHED . They oppose Gardasil because it may encourage teen age sex . Here's a CLUE fellows being a teen ager encourages teen age sex . In fact today there is frequently preteen sex as kids mature earlier and earlier

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2%?
Posted by: BlackBook on Jul 2, 2009 9:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is this article really predicated on a 2% drop in condom use? Seriously? The rise in teenage pregnancies has less to do with lack of condom use and more to do with a deliberate attempt by many teenage girls to get pregnant. When you've got nothing left to live for, you have a kid. It gives life "meaning." Meaning that our culturally devoid, materialistic lives sorely lack. Thank you, "Me" Generation.

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The law of unintended consequences strikes again.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jul 2, 2009 10:44 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ironcally, abstenance education programs also have resulted in an increase in oral and anal sex between teenagers, the latter being particularly dangerous for both SDS transmission, including AIDS, and for physical damage. The delicate tissues of the "pushin-outzin" are not designed to handle the abuse of the "pounden-inzin." This may have something to do with the increase in SDS transmission between teenagers in spite of abstenance education programs which include much about the dangers of venereal disease.

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Education, here is some for you
Posted by: solrev on Jul 2, 2009 12:30 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These articles are more political than rational. Abstinence education does not work, hear is a news flash for you neither does prevention education work. You people really think teenagers are stupid and need sex education from you? Kids by the time they are teenagers already know all the sex you think you can teach them. The article mentions AIDS, even I have noticed that all one hears about aids anymore is how much money, we are giving to Africa to combat Aids. This is probably not a good trend. If you ask a teenager that has become pregnant, why they are pregnant, the first thing you are going to hear is, I don’t know. With a little more coaxing you are going to hear, I didn’t care in many cases. Lack of money for condoms or birth control may be economic factors. Sex education of any kind is not going to solve a cultural-economic problem. The root cause of the problem is not a lack of education. Do some research and find out why teenagers are willing to take the risk and stop pretending that they are unaware of the risks.

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» RE: BS Posted by: Silverhawk
The Religious Right & King Cnut
Posted by: Freticat on Jul 2, 2009 7:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The difference between the two is that, according to one account, Cnut knew the tide wouldn't stop at his command. The similarity is that, like the tide, sexuality doesn't obey anyone's commands (just ask Messrs. Sanford, Foley, Craig, Vitter, Gingrich, Haggard, Swaggert, Spitzer...).

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Not only do we need SCIENCE-based sex ed...
Posted by: bnvasquez on Jul 3, 2009 9:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need to really teach everyone about consent, and I mean enthusiastically willing consent. Having sex with a drunk girl when she says yes is not consent, it is rape. Not gray rape. Rape.

I'm not against teaching abstinence, but I am against teenagers, especially those women of color, not being taught about their bodies and about diseases that they could get. Over 50% of Latinas become pregnant before 20. I'm all for doing what you want with your body, but when the statistics are that high in comparison to other so-called ethnic groups, that's ridiculous. It really upsets me that so many girls give up on school and furthering their education because they have a child. And no, I'm not saying having children at an early age is all bad, but think of the woman's choices and struggles afterwards. Many women don't regret their kids (and they shouldn't) but they do wish they would have waited until they were secure.

There are too many times I have seen the girls at my high school struggle just to graduate because they had to work, take care of their child, and go to school. This is not a coincidence, or just about our culture. It is about the lack of education regarding our sexual health in not only low-income schools, but even in "good" schools. Parents need to stand up for better sex ed, for their kids' sake.

In many Latino families, having a child is a norm expected before age 20. I have been asked when I would be getting married and having a child. I usually answer with "Well...after I get my PhD". What saddens me is that because I am a Latina, other Latinos don't automatically assume that I will wait to have children after I get my education. Is this all to blame on the Latino culture? No, because even if some parents did not have that expectation, they could inadvertently expect to remain in the short end of the stick when it comes to their children's health.

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MISSISSSIPPI HAS ACTED TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM ACCORDING TO JAY LENO. THEY
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Jul 3, 2009 9:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
are doing their bit to solve teenage pregnancy. They have made alcohol illegal at family reunions.

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They groan
Posted by: jankantius on Jul 4, 2009 11:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My grade five student's get so much sex ed they groan when I say time for another health lesson. I do it cuz I know that there is not a lotta prospect for them getting the info in school in later years

I took both grade 5 classes on a boat trip and some a the kids were laughing at a condom floating in the water.. The other class has a younger teacher... maybe 40... and for his sex ed classes he just calls in a public health nurse who talks to them about the need for deoderant and frequent bathing.

So a kid from that class sez."whats that?'
Another kid sez, "It's a condom"
So the first kid repeats... "what's that"

That, unfortunately is the level of sex education most people can expect for their kids.

I live in a mostly Catholic/Anglican community.. and in the 20 or so years I have been doing extensive sex education I have only had one complaint. A couple wanted to meet with me and the principal because I had been talking about condoms in class... they were very shocked. My boss excused herself and came back 5 minutes later with a copy of the health ed curriculum. She handed it to them, let them look at it for a few minutes and then excused herself.

A lotta my curriculum includes lies you will be told by your friends. They will tell you they have more experience than you do, they will tell you everyone is doing it, they will tell you that they only want sex to show how much they love you, and they will tell you that you don't need to worry about condoms.. And at least 90% of all of it is lies.

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sex
Posted by: sex on Jul 6, 2009 2:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Liquid Solution.
Posted by: melpol on Jul 6, 2009 5:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alpha males are spreading their semen far and wide. Women never practice abstinence when a handsome guy is horny. Mother Nature has programmed women to melt at the touch of the king of beasts. His liquid solution defies any practical solution.

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KKUD EJH TKJ
Posted by: ruruben on Jul 7, 2009 1:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
MKV to AVI ,Professionally convert your mkv files to avi format, other popular video and audio format supported

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abstinence
Posted by: lindalee on Jul 7, 2009 7:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sure, abstinence is 100% effective as birth control. But the DUH factor there is pretty high. We don't need federal money being poured into programs that promote something that any teenager with half a brain knows already. My 19-year-old was smart enough to see this in 9th grade health class and most of the kids in class laughed when it was brought up. I'm thrilled that our school system had a progressive attitude with health classes and would have been the school's worst nightmare if they'd wasted his time with abstinence encouragement.

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