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Tuesday, December 18, 2007 | Reason : Children and Religion | print version Print | Comments

Document Abstinence Programs Face Rejection

by Washington Post

Thanks to jvwess for the link.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2007/12/16/ST2007121600086.html

Abstinence Programs Face Rejection
More States Opt to Turn Down the Federal Money Attached to That Kind of Sex Ed

By Rob Stein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, December 16, 2007; Page A03


The number of states refusing federal money for "abstinence-only" sex education programs jumped sharply in the past year as evidence mounted that the approach is ineffective.

At least 14 states have either notified the federal government that they will no longer be requesting the funds or are not expected to apply, forgoing more than $15 million of the $50 million available, officials said. Virginia was the most recent state to opt out.

Two other states -- Ohio and Washington -- have applied but stipulated they would use the money for comprehensive sex education, effectively making themselves ineligible, federal officials said. While Maryland and the District are planning to continue applying for the money, other states are considering withdrawing as well.

Until this year, only four states had passed up the funding.

"We're concerned about this," said Stan Koutstaal of the Department of Health and Human Services, which runs the program. "My greatest concern about states dropping out is that these are valuable services and programs. It's the youths in these states who are missing out."

The number of states spurning the money has grown even as Congress considers boosting overall funding for abstinence-only education to $204 million, with most of it going directly to community organizations.

The trend has triggered intense lobbying of state legislators and governors around the country. Supporters of the programs are scrambling to reverse the decisions, while opponents are pressuring more states to join the trend.

"This wave of states rejecting the money is a bellwether," said William Smith of the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States, a Washington-based advocacy and education group that opposes abstinence-only programs. "It's a canary in the coal mine of what's to come."

"We hope that it sends a message to the politicians in Washington that this program needs to change, and states need to be able to craft a program that is the best fit for their young people and that is not a dictated by Washington ideologues," Smith said.

Smith and other critics said they hope that if enough states drop out, Congress will redirect the funding to comprehensive sex education programs that include teaching about the use of condoms and other contraceptives.

"I think this could be the straw that breaks the camel's back in terms of continued funding of these programs," said John Wagoner of Advocates for Youth, another Washington advocacy group. "How can they ignore so many states slapping a return-to-sender label on this funding?"

But supporters said they plan to fight for the programs state by state.

Abstinence Programs Face Rejection

"We're talking about the health of millions of youth across the United States," said Valerie Huber of the National Abstinence Education Association. "We know abstinence education offers the best for them. Now is the time to put more emphasis on that message, not less."

Huber disputed criticism that the programs are ineffective or overly restrictive.

"Our critics would have governors believe that these programs are just somebody standing in front of the class wagging a finger and saying, 'No. No. No. Don't have sex.' That's not what these classes entail," Huber said. "They are holistic. They include relationship-building skills and medically accurate discussions of sexually transmitted diseases and contraception."

Congress is considering boosting the $176 million in annual funding for abstinence programs by $28 million. State governments can apply for portions of a $50 million fund, which they use for a variety of purposes, including school classes, community groups, state and local health departments and media campaigns. But the money is restricted to efforts focused on promoting abstinence.

The jump in states opting out follows a series of reports questioning the effectiveness of the approach, including one commissioned by Congress that was released earlier this year. In addition, federal health officials reported last week that a 14-year drop in teenage pregnancy rates appeared to have reversed.

"This abstinence-only program is just not getting the job done," said Cecile Richards of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. "This is a ideologically based program that doesn't have any support in science."

But Koutstaal, the federal official, took issue with critics who blame abstinence programs for the increase in teen births, noting that rates have continued to decline for 10-to-14-year-olds -- the ages typically targeted by the programs.

"I think it's awfully hard to blame abstinence education for the increase in birth rates," he said.

The program was started as part of the 1996 welfare reform. California, however, dropped out in 2000, forgoing more than $7 million it was eligible to receive, and Maine opted out in 2005, giving up $161,000. Most states, however, did participate. New Jersey decided to opt out last year, rejecting more than $900,000 in funding, and others followed.

"The governor has often stated that abstinence-only education does not show any results," said Gordon Hickey, a spokesman for Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D), who announced plans to give up the funding last month. "It doesn't work. He's a firm believer in more comprehensive sex education."

Colorado also decided this fall not to seek about $450,000 that it is eligible to receive.

"Why would we spend tax dollars on something that doesn't work?" asked Ned Calonge of the Colorado Department of Health and Environment. "That doesn't make sense to me. Philosophically, I am opposed to spending government dollars on something that's ineffective. That's just irresponsible."

The reasons given for passing up the federal money vary from state to state. Some governors publicly repudiated the programs. Others quietly let their applications lapse or blamed tight budgets that made it impossible to meet the requirement to provide matching state funds. Still others are asking for more flexibility.

"The governor supports abstinence education," Keith Daily, a spokesman for Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland (D). "What he does not support is abstinence- only education. We are asking to put the money toward abstinence in the context of a comprehensive age-appropriate curriculum."

Most of the battles on the state level are being fought by local affiliates supported by national groups. In Illinois, opponents are planning to launch a campaign next month involving more than 100 state groups to try to sway the governor and state legislature to forgo about $1.8 million in funding.

"These programs are dangerous," said Jonathan Stacks of the Illinois Caucus for Adolescent Health. "We're trying to get people across the state to raise their voice on this issue. I think once those voices are heard, the legislature and the governor won't have any choice but to back the will of the voters."

Comments 1 - 29 of 29 |

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1. Comment #100087 by Matt7895 on December 18, 2007 at 8:26 am

 avatarExcellent news.

Other Comments by Matt7895

2. Comment #100093 by USA_Limey on December 18, 2007 at 8:30 am

 avatarInsisting horny teenagers resist all temptation until they get married is the very definition of stupidity IMHO.

On another point I've often thought that western society has created an artificial situation where adulthood is delayed for far too long in some cases. Too many teenagers are straining against the bit in their mid teens where a hundred years ago they could have gone to work, gotten married, joined the navy, basically explored alot more options than are seemingly available to them now. Extended education is not for everyone.

And finally, if God set things up so teens have been through puberty and are beginning to get curious who are we to question?

Other Comments by USA_Limey

3. Comment #100097 by jmrunning3 on December 18, 2007 at 8:35 am

Yes, great news and obviously a growing trend.

What frustrates me so much is that the abstinence supporters, even when faced with overwhelming evidence undermining abstinence-only programs, say "Well, we just need to further increase what we are already doing. That'll prove we're right." ARGH!

Why let evidence get in the way of rational, sound decisions? That's just silly.

Other Comments by jmrunning3

4. Comment #100099 by Rtambree on December 18, 2007 at 8:37 am

'Bout time

Other Comments by Rtambree

5. Comment #100116 by notsobad on December 18, 2007 at 9:01 am

 avatarAbout time:
"Teenagers who take virginity pledges -- public declarations to abstain from sex -- are almost as likely to be infected with a sexually transmitted disease as those who never made the pledge, an eight-year study released yesterday found."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A48509-2005Mar18.html
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7232643/

These people also marry early and try fewer partners, so it's not surprising that these people have the highest divorce rates.

Other Comments by notsobad

6. Comment #100117 by seekerofall on December 18, 2007 at 9:03 am

 avatarTo practice abstinence is to deny the basic urges of human nature....what better way to get teenagers to do anything....tell them not to...rebellion is a natural part of growing up....someone tell me the idea of abstinence and the program to fund it by our government didn't come from the fanatical evangelical christian right..........

Other Comments by seekerofall

7. Comment #100124 by wednesdayguevara on December 18, 2007 at 9:15 am

This is great news!

Has anyone ever seen the Penn & Teller: Bullshit! about abstinence-only education? They ask one lady (she had been called into the health class to do a session on abstinence in some public school) if she had practiced abstinence before marriage herself. The woman hemmed and the woman hawed and then she invoked the old chestnut, "Well, it was the '60's..."

Other Comments by wednesdayguevara

8. Comment #100159 by Ducklike on December 18, 2007 at 10:20 am

 avatarInteresting. Do the abstinence supporters believe if they give kids (only) abstinence, then the kids will have to turn to religion to make it work?

It's refreshing to see opposition to this "garden path" approach.

Other Comments by Ducklike

9. Comment #100166 by Gymnopedie on December 18, 2007 at 10:38 am

It seems obvious the people who promote the abstinence only education probably are not human, or apparently skipped puberty and went right on to be self righteous assholes.

The whole issue is a clash of ideology and science. No matter what the facts are, the ideology must be promoted. A baffling mentality.

Other Comments by Gymnopedie

10. Comment #100180 by cowalker on December 18, 2007 at 10:59 am

"Our critics would have governors believe that these programs are just somebody standing in front of the class wagging a finger and saying, 'No. No. No. Don't have sex.' That's not what these classes entail," Huber said. "They are holistic. They include relationship-building skills and medically accurate discussions of sexually transmitted diseases and contraception."


Doesn't she get that it doesn't matter what the classes entail if they don't work? Would these dimbulbs want to continue forever a counseling-only approach to prevent burglary that didn't work?

"Our critics would have judges believe that these programs are just somebody standing in front of the convicted burglars wagging a finger and saying, 'No. No. No. Don't rob houses.' That's not what this counseling entails. The counselors are holistic. They include teaching impulse control and job-seeking skills and money management."

Well, I'd be all for it. Decrease the jail population, save lives from being ruined. So what say you, Christian conservatives? For how many years should we continue to handle the crime of burglary with the counseling-only approach if the rate of burglaries increases and it becomes increasingly obvious that the program isn't working?

Other Comments by cowalker

11. Comment #100189 by jimbob on December 18, 2007 at 11:20 am

The bottom line is that religious dogma underpins "abstinence education." Like "faith-based" social programs, such approaches are unconstitutional, and should be terminated.

...of course, that's in addition to the evidence that indicates that abstinence makes the lust grow stronger!

;-)

Other Comments by jimbob

12. Comment #100194 by phasmagigas on December 18, 2007 at 11:26 am

 avatarI know somebody who got married so she could have sex with her then boyfriend and very soon into the marriage things went wrong generally.

The pro abstinence lot are not living in the real world. Evolution simply does not allow for clear thinking during sexual courtship, sex is inevitable and when there is no condom in the back pocket people will simply copulate without one. they think some 16 year old guy is going to stick to his abstinence vows during the heat of the moment, what a joke, its almost like the religious lobby are in denial of our animal instincts.



Just what the hell is it with sex and religion??

Other Comments by phasmagigas

13. Comment #100199 by tweeker on December 18, 2007 at 11:29 am

"...as evidence mounted that the approach is ineffective."

Anyone else catch the pun there?

Other Comments by tweeker

14. Comment #100207 by clodhopper on December 18, 2007 at 11:38 am

 avatar
It's the youths in these states who are missing out."


Ain't that the truth?

Other Comments by clodhopper

15. Comment #100217 by USA_Limey on December 18, 2007 at 11:45 am

 avatarThe more I think about this the more I wish I was a teenager again in the midst of all this.

I'd have great fun telling my girlfriends; "it's ok - we can get naked together - we've both taken vows of abstinence so you know nothing is going to happen"


Ahhh.... such missed opportunities.

Other Comments by USA_Limey

16. Comment #100254 by GodlessHeathen on December 18, 2007 at 12:28 pm

 avatarI wish they'd send one million of that rejected 15 to the youth shelter where I work. That'd keep us able to actually help a goodly few teens for two years.

Jeez. Such a waste of money on a program that was so obviously going to flop.

Other Comments by GodlessHeathen

17. Comment #100309 by mandrellian on December 18, 2007 at 1:38 pm

Sheesh, what a surprise.

I was consciously Christian for a brief period as a teenager but - and may god strike me dead were it otherwise - I would've dropped everything, including my New Testament, to hop in the sack with an amenable girl at the earliest opportunity. As it was the opportunity didn't arise until after I'd renounced religion at 15. Curious timing ... I think Satan was trying to tell me something.

Anyone with the slightest idea of human nature and even fleeting memories of being a teenager knew that the "abstinence-only" approach was doomed to fail the moment it arose and was just throwing a bone to religionists. You wouldn't see that kind of lame excuse for "education" being pushed on people in a country that didn't have such an insidious religious undercurrent. You can't tell teenagers "no" without assuming that they'll go ahead and do it anyway and will therefore need to be protected from the results of their actions in some way.

Other Comments by mandrellian

18. Comment #100448 by Russell Blackford on December 18, 2007 at 4:05 pm

Yes, this is great news.

Teenagers are typically as randy as rabbits. We need educational programs that start with this truth, even if it's an inconvenient one. Teach them about contraception; teach them about safety; teach them about alternatives to vaginal intercourse; teach the girls about how to get help if they get pregnant. But don't assume you'll be able to teach them abstinence. They'll want to give and receive sexual pleasure ... and who can blame them? That has to be the starting point.

Other Comments by Russell Blackford

19. Comment #100528 by Jack Rawlinson on December 18, 2007 at 8:01 pm

 avatarAs others have said, the key here is real, solid sex education at an early age - well before puberty. Most teenagers do get absurdly horny and will have some sex if they can. I don't blame them. I was the same. It's natural, for goodness sake. What you do with natural things that might have major consequences is educate kids about them: fully, accurately and with no silly squeamishness or prudery.

I consider myself very lucky to have been a pre-teen in early seventies Britain. At age 11 we were given the business: sex, what it is, how it's done, what the risks are, what's effective contraception and what isn't, STDs and how to avoid them, what to do about them if you get them... the only thing my sex ed was weak on was homosexuality, but life taught me about that pretty quickly.

I swear, people diss the seventies (and often for very sound reasons), but we had some good education back then.



Other Comments by Jack Rawlinson

20. Comment #100530 by Jack Rawlinson on December 18, 2007 at 8:06 pm

 avatarAlso, random less-than-six-degrees-of-separation interesting fact! The lead author of that study mentioned in notsobad's Washington Post link is my partner's ex husband. Blimey!

Other Comments by Jack Rawlinson

21. Comment #100562 by MuNky82 on December 18, 2007 at 11:06 pm

 avatarI can't remember the comedian who said:
"Abstinence-only sex education is like just-hold-it-in potty training"

Simple and quick question to ask a religious fundie who is pro-abstinence-only sex ed:
Why did god create our bodies and hormones to have such urges at such a 'young' age?

Other Comments by MuNky82

22. Comment #100585 by Conrad on December 19, 2007 at 12:17 am

I, like everyone else, am not surprised. Next on the list of no brainers (though not really gov't supported in money) is that cohabitation before marraige is not damaging either.

I would also like to know exactly what "relationship building skills" means. This too could easily be biased biblical bollocks.

Other Comments by Conrad

23. Comment #100607 by GBile on December 19, 2007 at 1:26 am

Abstinence ! Good !! And no jerking off either , dumwits !!

Other Comments by GBile

24. Comment #100623 by Tycho the Dog on December 19, 2007 at 2:22 am

 avatarMuNky82 #100562

But god didn't create us like that. It's all a result of the the fall and original sin. Sex is bad - it's a punishment; it's not meant to be natural or enjoyable (except under the strict circumstances of making babies within marriage).

Take god out of the equation and the notion of imposing abstinence on teenagers can be seen for what it is - religiously-inspired bollocks.

Other Comments by Tycho the Dog

25. Comment #100630 by stephenray on December 19, 2007 at 2:46 am

MuNky82: your question
"Simple and quick question to ask a religious fundie who is pro-abstinence-only sex ed:
Why did god create our bodies and hormones to have such urges at such a 'young' age?"

betrays a fundamental failure to engage with modern theology.

God did it, of course, for the same reason that he carefully created a tree, put brightly coloured fruit on it capable of bringing the knowledge of right and wrong to the primordial couple, and then said: "See that tree over there? The one with the brightly coloured fruit? *No touchee, no eatee*, OK?"

On a related point, wouldn't it be better, if we wanted teenagers not to have sex, to make it compulsory? Any fule kno that teenagers will refuse to do anything they are told...

"Oh, no, it's my 12th birthday next week. Now I have to have sex every Saturday night until I leave school..."

Other Comments by stephenray

26. Comment #100662 by padster1976 on December 19, 2007 at 4:39 am

 avatar"We're concerned about this," said Stan Koutstaal of the Department of Health and Human Services, which runs the program. "My greatest concern about states dropping out is that these are valuable services and programs. It's the youths in these states who are missing out."

Yeah, missing out on a crap idea.

Other Comments by padster1976

27. Comment #100716 by Bertybob on December 19, 2007 at 7:31 am

 avatarWhy are the fundies so hung up about peoples sexual behaviour?

There is a difference between staying on the right side of the law (UK age of consent is 16) and sex before marriage.

One is about child protection, and one is just being a busy-body and worrying that someone else might be having some fun!!

It is immoral not to teach teenages proper sex education, even if under the age of consent. It is for their own health and also not to create a drain on the state.

Other Comments by Bertybob

28. Comment #100731 by hungarianelephant on December 19, 2007 at 8:24 am

 avatarWhile I am no supporter of abstinence education, does anyone really think that sex education in the UK over the last 40 years has been a resounding success?

Other Comments by hungarianelephant

29. Comment #100741 by Bonzai on December 19, 2007 at 9:01 am

Simple and quick question to ask a religious fundie who is pro-abstinence-only sex ed:
Why did god create our bodies and hormones to have such urges at such a 'young' age?


How old were the wives of the patriarchs in the Bible? I don't have the book in front of me but if I remember correctly, quite a few married at age that we would consider children today. Ironically the fundies' attitude towards sex demonstrates that they don't get their morality from the bible, some other fuck up places for sure, but not the bible.

Not only the moderates cheery pick, so do the so called fundies.

Other Comments by Bonzai
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