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Los Angeles Times, December 7, 2004
Abstinence-Only:
Breeding Ignorance; The Bush-backed sex education
programs are filled with errors
BYLINE: Mary-Jane Wagle is CEO of Planned Parenthood
Los Angeles.
Imagine a driver's education course in which
teachers show students grisly photos of traffic
accidents but never tell them to stop at red
lights or buckle their seat belts, and you've
a pretty good idea of what abstinence-only
sex education is like. Abstinence-only programs
try to scare and shame teens, teaching only
the negative consequences of sexuality without
telling young people what they can do to stay
safe and healthy.
Now a congressional staff analysis on the content
of the federally funded sex education programs
used in 25 states reveals they're just plain
wrong. The report found that more than 80%
of abstinence-only curricula contain false,
misleading or distorted information about reproductive
health.
The analysis, released by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Los
Angeles), found that many of these curricula
contain false information about the effectiveness
of contraceptives and the risks of abortion.
Several of the curricula contain basic scientific
errors and present religious views as proven
fact. Some curricula also treat gender stereotypes
as scientific truth.
Here are some examples: In several abstinence-only
programs, students are erroneously told that
condoms fail to protect against HIV and that
pregnancy occurs one out of every seven times
that couples use a condom. One textbook states
that touching another person's genitals "can
result in pregnancy." Another suggests
that 5% to 10% of women who have legal abortions
will become sterile as a result.
One curriculum refers to a 43-day-old fetus as
"a thinking person." Another incorrectly
lists exposure to sweat and tears as risk factors
for HIV transmission. And one textbook sanctimoniously
instructs teenagers: "Women gauge their
happiness and judge their success on their
relationships. Men's happiness and success
hinge on their accomplishments."
California has been wise enough to see through
the hype of abstinence-only sex education,
and it continues to be one of the few states
that refuse to accept the federal funding for
abstinence-only curricula.
Californians mandate HIV/AIDS education in our
schools and require that all sexuality education
is comprehensive and medically accurate. And
our attention to the needs of our state's youth
has paid off. Our teen pregnancy rate has fallen
by 40% over the last 10 years -- the largest
decrease of any state except Alaska.
Abstinence-only curricula, such as those being
pushed and funded by the Bush administration,
aren't just riddled with errors -- they clearly
have no positive effect on the behavior of
teens. Researchers at Columbia University found
that while virginity "pledge" programs
did help some of the participants delay sex,
88% still had premarital sex.
Additionally, the rates of sexually transmitted
infections among pledgers showed no statistically
significant difference from non-pledgers.
Despite these problems, the federal government
will squander an astonishing $168 million for
these programs in fiscal 2005. Although this
falls short of the $270 million President Bush
initially proposed, it more than doubles the
amount spent in 2001. Meanwhile, programs that
work go unfunded.
Proponents of abstinence-only sex education believe
that knowledge can be dangerous. Ignorance,
however, can be fatal. Last week, we marked
World AIDS Day. When our young people are at
risk of HIV infection as well as other sexually
transmitted infections, it is unconscionable
to deprive them of information that can save
their lives.
<< Los Angeles Times -- 12/7/04 >>
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