ABSTINENCE FAILURE
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Abstinence Failure - It's not
100% safe
I want to state that I never claimed
to be a medical doctor, as Pastor Green's Forum article
titled "Dobson is Right..." claims. I agree with Pastor
Green's statement "...what kind of doctor gives us this kind
of advice?" I would ask him to ask Dr. Dobson that question.
I pulled all of my information from the government web sites
I noted in my Forum article. I can't tell you where Dr.
Dobson pulled his information from.
Pastor Green goes on to say "Shouldn't
he be giving us the best possible scenario for stopping the
spread of this disease?" or any Sexually Transmitted
Infection? Dr. Dobson suggested that an Abstinence-only
approach is 100% effective. This is misleading and
potentially dangerous. There can't be one slip. To be 100%
effective it requires one to abstain from petting, as well
as oral and anal sex, not just coitus, 100% of the
time.
That's why I had proposed an
abstinence-plus approach which promotes abstinence as the
best choice but provides information on contraception in
case a teen becomes sexually active. This, I believe, is the
most successful approach to truly reduce STD and teen
pregnancy.
Half of all new human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infections in the United States and two thirds
of all sexually transmitted diseases (STD) occur among young
people under the age of 25. It is estimated that by the end
of high school, nearly two thirds of American youth have
been sexually active, and one in five has had four or more
sexual partners. Despite these alarming statistics, less
than half of all public schools in the United States offer
information on how to obtain contraceptives and most schools
increasingly teach abstinence-only-until-marriage education.
There is little evidence that abstinence-only programs are
successful in encouraging teenagers to delay all sexual
activity until marriage, and for those who don't make it,
nothing is taught how to avoid pregnancy, or STD or HIV
infection. Comprehensive sex education, which emphasizes the
benefits of abstinence while also teaching about
contraception and disease-prevention methods, has been
proven to reduce rates of teen pregnancy and STD
infection.
The Kaiser Family Foundation and
Seventeen magazine found that half of all 15-17 year-olds
believe that a person who has oral sex is still a virgin.
Even more striking, the study found that 55% of college
students pledging virginity until marriage, who said they
had kept their vow, reported having had oral sex. While
pledgers generally were somewhat less likely to have had
vaginal sex than nonpledgers, they were equally likely to
have had oral or anal sex. The Alan Guttmacher Institute
indicated that 25% of the decrease in the U.S. teen
pregnancy rate was due to a decline in the proportion of
teenagers who had never had sex while 75% was due to
improved contraceptive use among sexually active teens. And,
Clara S. Haignere, Ph.D, associate processor of public
health at Temple University found that abstinence has a
user-failure rate between 26 and 86 percent. This rate is
considerably higher than the condom user-failure
rate.
"Abstinence is complicated to use. It
requires negotiation skills. Teens have to talk to their
partners about it, and use it all the time - every time
they're intimate," says Haignere. The "Just say no to sex"
approach isn't realistic, given that nearly half of all
9th-12th graders have already had sexual intercourse,
according to the 2001 Youth Risk Behavior survey by the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Pastor Green also tried to put words
in my mouth when he suggested that I recommended that
"...you and your sexual 'partners' should not worry about a
person's sexual history." I am adamant that all people
have a Responsible Sex Conversation even before petting. My
recommendation requires partners to probably have a deeper
conversation than the majority of readers have ever had.
(See
www.menstuff.org/issues/byissue/responsiblesexconversation.html)
So, Pastor Green, if you want to
believe Dr. Dobson's information versus what the Centers for
Disease Control and the National Health Institute believe,
as you said, that's your right. However, this attitude only
adds to the mistrust of religious teachers and in the end
will result in an increase of STDs and unplanned
pregnancies. When one realizes that vows of abstinence break
far more often than condoms, responsible people will want
our youth to know more about safer sex options. Tuesday,
February 14th, is National Condom Day. It might be a good
day for parents to check out www.letstalkaboutsex.org to
find out positive ways to approach this difficult subject
with their children.
Let's teach teens abstinence plus
providing information regarding safer sex. Using condoms and
birth control will help a majority of young people. If teens
are taught that no sex is safe sex, they'll have sex anyway
without knowing the safer things to do.
Gordon Clay, Brookings
Related Issues:
Abstinence-Only
Education, Abstinence
Only Fact Sheet ,
Morality
Police,
Response
to Dr. Dobson
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