|
New York Times, February 16, 2005
Bush's Sex Scandal
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
I'm sorry to report a sex scandal in the heart
of the Bush administration. Worse, it doesn't
involve private behavior, but public conduct.
You see, for all the carnage in President Bush's
budget, one program is being showered with
additional cash - almost three times as much
as it got in 2001. It's "abstinence only"
sex education, and the best research suggests
that it will cost far more lives than the Clinton
administration's much more notorious sex scandal.
Mr. Bush means well. But "abstinence only"
is a misnomer that in practice is an assault
on sex education itself. There's a good deal
of evidence that the result will not be more
young rosy-cheeked virgins - it will be more
pregnancies, abortions, gonorrhea and deaths
from AIDS.
Look, I'm all for abstinence education. I support
the booming abstinence industry as it peddles
panties and boxers decorated with stop signs
(at www.abstinence.net), and "Pet Your
Dog, Not Your Date" T-shirts.
Abstinence education is great because it helps
counteract the peer pressure that often leaves
teenagers with broken hearts - and broken health.
For that reason, almost all sex-ed classes in
America already encourage abstinence. But abstinence-only
education isn't primarily about promoting abstinence
- it's about blindly refusing to teach contraception.
To get federal funds, for example, abstinence-only
programs are typically barred by law from discussing
condoms or other forms of contraception - except
to describe how they can fail. So kids in these
programs go all through high school without
learning anything but abstinence, even though
more than 60 percent of American teenagers
have sex before age 18.
In the old days, social conservatives simply
fought any mention of sex. In 1906, The Ladies'
Home Journal published articles about venereal
disease - and 75,000 readers canceled their
subscriptions. Congress banned the mailing
of family planning information, and Margaret
Sanger was jailed in 1916 for selling a birth
control pamphlet to an undercover policewoman.
But silence about sex only nurtured venereal
diseases (one New York doctor, probably exaggerating,
claimed in 1904 that 60 percent of American
men had syphilis or gonorrhea), so sex education
gradually gained ground. Then social conservatives
had a brilliant idea: instead of fighting sex
ed directly, they campaigned for abstinence-only
programs that eviscerated any discussion of
contraception.
That shrewd approach succeeded. In 1988, a survey
by the Alan Guttmacher Institute found that
only 2 percent of sex-ed teachers used an abstinence-only
approach. Now, the institute says, a quarter
of them do.
Other developed countries focus much more on
contraception. The upshot is that while teenagers
in the U.S. have about as much sexual activity
as teenagers in Canada or Europe, Americans
girls are four times as likely as German girls
to become pregnant, almost five times as likely
as French girls to have a baby, and more than
seven times as likely as Dutch girls to have
an abortion. Young Americans are five times
as likely to have H.I.V. as young Germans,
and teenagers' gonorrhea rate is 70 times higher
in the U.S. than in the Netherlands or France.
Some studies have claimed that abstinence-only
programs work, but researchers criticize the
studies for being riddled with flaws. A National
Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy task force
examined the issue and concluded: "There
do not currently exist any abstinence-only
programs with strong evidence that they either
delay sex or reduce teen pregnancy."
Worse, there's some evidence that abstinence-only
programs lead to increases in unprotected sex.
Perhaps the most careful study of the issue involved
12,000 young people. It found that those taking
virginity pledges had sex 18 months later,
on average, than those who had not taken the
pledge. But even 88 percent of the pledgers
had sex before marriage.
More troubling, the pledgers were much less likely
to use contraception when they did have sex
- only 40 percent of the males used condoms,
compared with 59 percent of those who did not
take the pledge.
In contrast, there's plenty of evidence that
abstinence-plus programs - which encourage
abstinence but also teach contraception - delay
sex and increase the use of contraception.
So, at a time when we're cutting school and
health programs, why should we pour additional
tax money into abstinence-only initiatives,
which are likely to lead to more pregnancies,
more abortions and more kids with AIDS? Now,
that's a scandal.
E-mail: nicholas@nytimes.com
Send this page to a
friend!
Home About
Us Newsletters News
Archives Donate
|