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Boston Globe, July 5, 2005
Pediatrician
group urges teen access to birth control
By Lindsey Tanner
CHICAGO -- A leading group of pediatricians says
teenagers need access to birth control and
emergency contraception, not the abstinence-only
approach to sex education favored by religious
groups and President Bush.
The recommendations are part of the American
Academy of Pediatrics' updated teen pregnancy
policy.
''Even though there is great enthusiasm in some
circles for abstinence-only interventions,
the evidence does not support abstinence-only
interventions as the best way to keep young
people from unintended pregnancy," said
Dr. Jonathan Klein, chairman of the academy
committee that wrote the new recommendations.
Teaching abstinence but not birth control makes
it more likely that once teenagers initiate
sexual activity, they will have unsafe sex
and contract sexually transmitted diseases,
said Dr. S. Paige Hertweck, a pediatric obstetrician-gynecologist
at the University of Louisville, an adviser
for the report.
The report appears in the July issue of Pediatrics,
being published today.
It updates a 1998 policy by omitting the statement
that ''abstinence counseling is an important
role for all pediatricians."
The new policy states that while doctors should
encourage adolescents to postpone sexual activity,
they also should help ensure that all teens
-- not just those who are sexually active --
have access to birth control, including emergency
contraception.
Wade Horn, assistant secretary for children and
families at the US Department of Health and
Human Services, said counseling only abstinence,
preferably until marriage, is the best approach
because it sends a clear, consistent message.
Teenagers who are sexually active should have
access to contraception, but making birth control
available to teens who aren't sends a contradictory
message, he said.
Citing 2003 government data, the academy's report
says more than 45 percent of high school girls
and 48 percent of boys have had sexual intercourse.
While teen pregnancy rates have decreased in
recent years, about 900,000 US teens get pregnant
each year.
Moreover, US teen birth rates are higher than
in comparable industrialized countries, which
may be partly due to greater access to contraception
in some countries, the report said.
The Medical Institute for Sexual Health, a nonprofit
group that has worked on proabstinence programs
with the Bush administration and faith-based
groups, opposes the academy's policy shift.
Karen Pearl, interim president of the Planned
Parenthood Federation of America, said, however,
that the academy ''is to be applauded . . .
for having medicine trump ideology."
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