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Salon.com, February 24, 2004
Bush's
Sex Fantasy
By Michelle Goldberg
The White House is pouring money
into programs that tell teens to just say no
to sex. Most experts say the programs don't
work -- except to enrich the religious right.
George
Bush's proposed 2005 budget cuts funding for
veterans' healthcare and public housing. It
freezes funding for after-school programs and
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families grants.
It provides less than one-sixth of the increase
needed to close the budget shortfall in the
AIDS Drug Assistance Program, which helps low-income
HIV patients access medical care and lifesaving
drugs. It cuts state Medicaid funding by $1.5
billion.
Yet when it comes to abstinence education, money
seems to be no object. Bush's budget recommends
$270 million for programs that try to dissuade
teenagers from having sex, double the amount
spent last year. Much of that money would be
given in grants to Christian organizations
such as Youth for Christ and to anti-abortion
groups operating so-called crisis pregnancy
centers, outfits that masquerade as women's
health clinics but deliver a strongly anti-abortion
message and often medically inaccurate information.
It would pay for school programs that teach
kids that premarital sex leads to psychological
maladies and that sex with condoms is a kind
of viral Russian roulette.
Experts in sex education and AIDS prevention
say that in a country where the vast majority
of people lose their virginity before their
wedding night, these lessons aren't just distorted,
they're dangerous. "To promote abstinence-only
in the era of AIDS is to promote ignorance.
It's inexplicable," says James Wagoner,
president of Advocates for Youth, a nonprofit
organization devoted to sex education. Some
abstinence-only programs, like more comprehensive
sex education, have been shown to delay the
age at which teenagers first have sex -- which
almost everyone agrees is a good thing. Yet
studies also show that when teenagers from
abstinence-only programs do have sex, they're
less likely than others to use protection.
Perhaps that's why the teen pregnancy rate
in Texas remains one of the highest in the
country, despite the abstinence-only policies
Bush pushed as governor.
"When you displace decades of public health
practice based on what works and substitute
a more ideological and political approach to
preventing teen pregnancy and HIV, you're really
using young people as a political football,"
says Wagoner. "It's their health and lives
that are placed in the balance as a result."
And it's not just American lives, either --
Bush is using American leverage to try to force
other countries to promote abstinence-only
education at the expense of safe sex.
Federally funded abstinence education has been
around since 1996, when Clinton's welfare reform
bill provided grants to states to teach abstinence.
Under Bush, though, it has expanded dramatically,
from $97.5 million when he took office to $270
million next year. Bush has also retooled abstinence-only
funding so that most of it is given directly
to private groups, several of them evangelical
religious organizations, and he has put it
under the same agency that runs his faith-based
initiatives.
For health and social service experts, however,
that presents one basic problem: There is no
scientific evidence that abstinence-only programs
work. Some studies are inconclusive; others
find, unambiguously, that the programs don't
work. Yet there's one way in which they're
clearly effective -- as a massive patronage
system for the religious right. Bill Smith,
legislative director for the Sexuality Information
and Education Council of the United States,
or SIECUS, a nonprofit research and lobbying
group that advocates comprehensive sex education,
calls abstinence-only grants "political
pork."
"This president clearly needs to shore up
the right wing of his party," Smith says.
"It's not a mistake that in his State
of the Union address he suggested doubling
domestic spending on these programs. It's an
election year and he has to give them something
to get their votes."
Bush's involvement with the abstinence-only movement
stretches back over a decade and is about more
than just electoral politics. It's a case study
in the right's subversion of science. Their
ideas rejected by mainstream scientists, conservatives
have built their own scientific infrastructure,
which then buttresses once-derided theories
in the political arena. This administration
recruits its scientists from that right-wing
counterintelligentsia, which has been funded
by some of the same groups that are now collecting
taxpayer money to teach abstinence-only programs
instead of traditional sex education.
The Bush administration has lately come under
fire for distorting science for political expediency.
Last week, the Union of Concerned Scientists
released a report on the administration's abuse
of science, along with a statement signed by
more than 60 scientific luminaries, including
20 Nobel laureates. "When scientific knowledge
has been found to be in conflict with its political
goals, the administration has often manipulated
the process through which science enters into
its decisions," the statement says. "This
has been done by placing people who are professionally
unqualified or who have clear conflicts of
interest in official posts and on scientific
advisory committees; by disbanding existing
advisory committees; by censoring and suppressing
reports by the government's own scientists;
and by simply not seeking independent scientific
advice. Other administrations have, on occasion,
engaged in such practices, but not so systematically
nor on so wide a front."
As an example of the president's disregard for
science, the report lists Bush's appointment
of abstinence advocate Dr. Joe McIlhaney to
government advisory panels. It describes McIlhaney
as a doctor of "questionable credentials"
who is "known for his published disdain
for the use of condoms to prevent the spread
of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases
and his continued advocacy of abstinence-only
programs despite negligible evidence that they
actually reduce pregnancy rates among young
people."
The founder of a Texas-based pro-abstinence think
tank called the Medical Institute for Sexual
Health, McIlhaney is an old Bush friend who
many say has shaped the president's policies
on abstinence. Demonstrating his faith in the
doctor, Bush placed him on the Presidential
Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS and on the advisory
committee to the director of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. That's an enormous
leap in legitimacy for McIlhaney, a former
OB-GYN and conservative Christian who just
nine years ago was reprimanded by the Texas
Department of Health for spreading false information
about sexually transmitted diseases and condoms'
ineffectiveness. In 1995, the Texas Department
of Health wrote a letter to McIlhaney's institute
criticizing a slide presentation he'd been
showing throughout the state. It included a
detailed slide-by-slide critique, prepared
by two doctors, a registered nurse and the
director of the state's HIV/STD Epidemiology
Division, that pointed out a number of distorted,
downright false and "ridiculous"
statements in McIlhaney's lesson. "Some
of the data presented suffers from investigator
bias," the letter said. "Dr. McIlhaney's
presentation tended to report the outlier data
as 'proof' that condoms don't work rather than
present those reports in the context of the
entire data set. The only data that was reported
in the presentation are those which supported
his bias on the topics he addressed. Intellectual
honesty demands that he present all the data."
Yet even as the Texas Department of Health was
criticizing McIlhaney's program, the state's
governor, George W. Bush, was embracing it.
"When he was governor of Texas, he promoted
and lobbied for and pushed abstinence-only
education," says Fred Peterson, a professor
of health education at the University of Texas
at Austin, who trains instructors to teach
comprehensive sexual education classes. McIlhaney
was and is a "major player" in Bush's
abstinence agenda, says Peterson. He's also
a beneficiary -- his Medical Institute for
Sexual Health has received $1.5 million in
federal contracts related to abstinence education
and STD research.
"He's very close politically and probably
personally to George W. Bush," Peterson
says. "I remember that Dr. McIlhaney did
a statewide conference on abstinence-only education,
and Governor Bush was the first speaker. Now,
Bush has appointed McIlhaney to a major policymaking
position."
Peterson, who's met McIlhaney on several occasions,
describes him as a nice man and a gentleman,
but one who never presents his findings in
venues where they might be debated. "Dr.
McIlhaney never presented papers at scientific
conferences in front of his own peers where
he would be challenged and questioned,"
he says. "His viewpoint was always presented
at churches and public forums that did not
include scientists, academicians and physicians."
McIlhaney couldn't be reached for comment, but
Joe Webb, CEO of the Medical Institute for
Sexual Health, defends the organization's scientific
integrity. "We're not a religious organization,
we're a medical educational organization,"
says Webb. "Every scientist brings presuppositions
to his or her work. We try to be aware of our
presumptions in terms of the research and science
we're doing. We do have values commitments,
just like any person would, but first and foremost,
we have to be accurate."
Often, though, the doctors associated with the
Medical Institute seem to put their "values
commitments" ahead of hard evidence. One
member of the institute's advisory board is
W. David Hager, the author of a book called
"As Jesus Cared for Women: Restoring Women
Then and Now." Hager has suggested prayer
as a cure for premenstrual syndrome and, in
private practice, refused to prescribe contraception
to unmarried women. In 2002, Bush appointed
Hager, whom Time Magazine called "scantily
credentialed," to head an FDA panel on
women's health policy, but after a public outcry,
he was merely made a member of the panel.
As the Union of Concerned Scientists report points
out, there's no evidence at all that the policies
pushed by the institute reduced pregnancy rates
in Texas. "Unfortunately, despite spending
more than $10 million on abstinence-only programs
in Texas alone, this strategy has not been
shown to be effective at curbing teen pregnancies
or halting the spread of HIV and other sexually
transmitted diseases," it says. "During
President Bush's tenure as governor of Texas
from 1995 to 2000, for instance, with abstinence-only
programs in place, the state ranked last in
the nation in the decline of teen birth rates
among 15- to 17-year-old females. Overall,
the teen pregnancy rate in Texas was exceeded
by only four other states."
The evidence on abstinence-only programs from
elsewhere hasn't been much more promising.
Last year, the Minnesota Department of Health
evaluated the state's five-year, $5 million
abstinence-only program and found that it hadn't
reduced sexual activity among teenagers at
all. Instead, over a year, the rates of sexual
activity among students taking the abstinence
course doubled, from 5.8 percent to 12.4 percent,
which corresponded to the rate of sexual activity
among teens statewide. The evaluators found
a "lack of fit between the program and
kids who face complex problems in their lives
and are most at risk for sexual activity."
Rebecca Maynard, a professor of education and
social policy at the University of Pennsylvania,
is the project director and principal investigator
for a study of abstinence-only programs commissioned
by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services. The results won't be out until 2006,
but when asked if there's any evidence that
abstinence-only programs work, Maynard says,
"There's not much evidence that they do
or that they don't." Still, Maynard says
that she hasn't come across any scientifically
inaccurate information in the curricula she's
evaluated (though she notes that she's not
a medical scientist).
Yet the government virtually mandates that abstinence-only
education exaggerate the risks of sex by requiring
federally funded programs to teach that "sexual
activity outside the context of marriage is
likely to have harmful psychological and physical
effects." (By this logic the sexual behavior
of most Americans has caused them psychological
and physical harm, since the overwhelming majority
of Americans have sex before they get married.)
As a review of popular abstinence-only curricula
conducted by the Sexuality Information and
Education Council shows, many programs do this
by telling students that premarital sex is
likely to ruin their relationships and perhaps
their lives.
"Unmarried couples who become sexually active
tend to stop communicating on all levels,"
teens are warned in the student workbook for
the Reasonable Reasons to Wait program. A workbook
for Choosing the Best Path includes this question:
"Circle the item(s) that can be totally
eliminated through the use of a condom? Infertility,
isolation, jealousy, poverty, heartbreak, substance
abuse, AIDS, pregnancy, cervical cancer, genital
herpes, unstable long-term commitments, depression,
embarrassment, meaningless wedding, sexual
violence, personal disappointment, suicide,
feelings of being used, loss of honesty, loneliness,
loss of personal goals, distrust of others,
pelvic inflammatory disease, loss of reputation,
fear of pregnancy, disappointed parents, loss
of self-esteem, leaving high school before
graduation."
The answer, according to the teachers guide,
is "None."
Then students are instructed to "cross out
the item(s) that can be eliminated by being
abstinent until marriage.
According to the teachers guide, the correct
answer is "All."
This kind of education hasn't been shown to stop
kids from having sex, though it has delayed
them. That in itself is a good thing -- most
experts believe it's healthier for teenagers
to lose their virginity later rather than sooner.
The problem is that when they do have sex,
these teenagers may be less likely to use condoms.
According to a 2001 study published in the
American Journal of Sociology, students who'd
signed public "virginity pledges,"
a key component of many abstinence-only programs,
had sex an average of a year and a half later
than their peers. Yet when they did have sex,
they were a third less likely to use contraceptives.
In the end, advocates of both comprehensive
sex education and abstinence-only want to discourage
teenagers from having sex. "The problem
with abstinence-only until marriage is not
the 'abstinence,' it's the 'only until marriage'
part," says Wagoner. "Public health
should be guided by what works. The last thing
we need is politicians grandstanding as moralists,
because it ends up delivering bad health for
young people. These programs are prohibited
from providing information about condoms or
contraception for the prevention of pregnancy
or disease."
That's true even if a teenager in the program
tells the instructor that he or she is already
having unprotected sex. Clearly, such teenagers
endanger themselves if they remain ignorant
about safe sex, but abstinence educators say
that giving advice about condoms would cloud
their absolute condemnation of premarital sex.
Besides, it's prohibited under the terms of
government grants.
"We don't tell them, 'If you're going to
have sex, go ahead and use this,'" says
Charles Eaddy, project coordinator for Metro
Atlanta Youth for Christ's abstinence program.
"We're specifically restricted from doing
that by law, and it would not be consistent
with the spirit of the program. We really encourage
you not to do this thing."
Last year, Metro Atlanta Youth for Christ received
a federal grant of $363,936 a year for three
years, doubling its budget. The group has used
the money to hire three "abstinence educators."
These educators aren't required to have any
specific credentials in public health. They
do, however, have to be Christian, because
Metro Atlanta Youth for Christ won't employee
people who aren't.
Other federal grantees include Bethany Christian
Services -- listed on the Department of Health
and Human Services Web site as Bethany Crisis
Pregnancy Services -- which bills itself as
a "not-for-profit, pro-life, Christian
adoption and family services agency,"
and A Woman's Concern, a crisis pregnancy center
in Boston. None of the 2003 grants went to
Jewish or Muslim groups. Not that many Jewish
groups are applying -- the Central Conference
of American Rabbis, which represents the Rabbis
of Reform Judaism, the country's largest denomination,
passed a resolution in 2001 calling for comprehensive
sex education and rejecting government funds
for abstinence-only programs.
While Christian abstinence-only groups are enjoying
federal largesse, many medical organizations
with expertise in protecting children from
AIDS are ineligible. Chicago's Children's Memorial
Hospital Section for Pediatric, Adolescent
and Maternal HIV Infection, which does outreach
and education in colleges and high schools
in at-risk areas of the city, relies on private
donations to finance its teaching. According
to Tom Foster, the section's academic manager,
teaching abstinence isn't an option. "What
I've heard from the very beginning is that
abstinence doesn't work, especially for our
target market, high-risk adolescents,"
he says.
The Centers for Disease Control used to agree.
"Until recently, a CDC initiative called
'Programs That Work' identified sex-education
programs that have been found to be effective
in scientific studies and provided this information
through its web site to interested communities,"
says a report on the Web site of U.S. Rep.
Henry Waxman, D-Calif. "In 2002, all five
'Programs That Work' provided comprehensive
sex education to teenagers, and none were 'abstinence-only.'
In the last year, and without scientific justification,
CDC has ended this initiative and erased information
about these proven sex education programs from
its web site."
Waxman has been so outraged by Bush's manipulation
of science that he's set up a Web site called
Politics & Science to chronicle it. As
Politics & Science shows, "Programs
That Work" isn't the only government health
document that's been scrubbed. "In October
2002, CDC replaced a comprehensive online fact
sheet about condoms with one lacking crucial
information on condom use and efficacy,"
says Waxman's site. "Like the CDC, the
State Department's Agency for International
Development (USAID) has censored its Web site
to remove information on the effectiveness
of condoms."
Conservatives hope that by challenging the idea
of safe sex, they can encourage Americans to
change their louche ways. In the meantime,
though, whether the right likes it or not,
Americans aren't waiting until marriage to
have sex. Thus abstinence-only programs and
the censorship of information about condoms
ignore the needs of the majority of the population.
By age 18, Wagoner says, 70 percent of young
people in the United States have had sexual
intercourse. "What relevance do these
programs have to young people when they stress
abstinence until marriage? Less than 10 percent
of Americans are virgins on their wedding night,"
he says. Of course, that's exactly what many
proponents of abstinence-only education want
to change. They argue that by accepting and
accommodating this unwholesome state of affairs,
sex educators only encourage it. Traditional
sex educators "make a fundamental assumption
that the vast majority of kids are going to
have sex and that therefore the job of sex
education is to prepare them for that event,"
says Webb.
Instead, Webb says, educators should focus on
preventing the "event" from happening
before students are legally wed. That might
seem unrealistic, but Webb believes that abstinence
education can change the mores of an entire
society. As evidence, he points to Uganda,
which he calls "probably the best example
of a long-term abstinence and character-based
approach."
"You have a situation there where HIV/AIDS
rates were as high as 30 percent," he
says. "Those rates have been brought down
to around 5 percent. It's the only country
in the world that has significantly reduced
the prevalence rate of HIV infection."
The idea that Uganda is an abstinence success
story is popular on the right these days. The
Heritage Foundation recently published a background
paper that concluded that Uganda's experience
shows that " a bstinence and marital fidelity
appear to be the most important factors in
preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS" and
" c ondoms do not play the primary role
in reducing HIV/AIDS transmission."
As the Heritage Foundation acknowledges, though,
Uganda used a so-called ABC approach. "A"
stands for abstinence, "B" for "be
faithful," and "C" for condoms
-- a formula very similar to that espoused
by most comprehensive sex educators in this
country. A report from the Alan Guttmacher
Institute, one of the country's leading sexuality
research organizations, says that Uganda benefited
from "a range of complementary messages
and services delivered by the government and
a wide diversity of nongovernmental organizations.
To be sure, those messages included the importance
of both young people delaying sexual initiation
and 'zero grazing' (monogamy). But contrary
to the assertions of social conservatives that
the case of Uganda proves that an undiluted
'abstinence-only' message is what makes the
difference, there is no evidence that abstinence-only
educational programs were even a significant
factor in Uganda between 1988 and 1995."
That hasn't stopped conservatives from trying
to export the abstinence-only messages to countries
that receive American aid. A recent law mandates
that one-third of U.S. assistance to fight
AIDS globally be used for abstinence education.
"In effect, this makes 'abstinence-until-marriage'
advocacy the single most important HIV/AIDS
prevention intervention of the U.S. government,"
says the Guttmacher report.
Meanwhile, the U.S. is trying to force its anti-condom
agenda on the rest of the world. As Politics
& Science reported, in December 2002, "the
U.S. delegation at the Asian and Pacific Population
Conference sponsored by the United Nations
attempted to delete endorsement of 'consistent
condom use' as a means of preventing HIV infection.
U.S. delegates took this position on the grounds
that recommending condom use would promote
underage sex."
As Waxman's site points out, there's no scientific
basis for this. "Contrary to these U.S.
claims, scientific studies have shown that
comprehensive sex education delays the onset
of sexual activity," it says. It's not
surprising, though, that the administration
would assert otherwise. "In pushing an
'abstinence only' agenda," Politics &
Science says, "the Bush Administration
has consistently distorted the scientific evidence
about what works in sex education."
Some in the administration may secretly agree.
In a 2002 story, Newsweek quoted a top Bush
adviser who dismissed the data showing that
the only effective sex education programs are
those that teach both abstinence and contraception.
"Values trumps data," the adviser said.
<< Salon.com -- 2/24/04 >>
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