Young people have the right to lead healthy lives. Providing
them with honest, age appropriate comprehensive sexual health education is a
key part in helping them take personal responsibility for their health and
well-being.
That's why sex education programs need to be informed by
evidence as well as include all the information and skills young people need to make healthy
decisions. Providing young people with the skills and tools to make
healthy decisions about sex and relationships is far more effective than
denying them information and simply telling them not to have sex.
Respecting young people promotes personal responsibility far
more effectively than denying them information. We should respect young people
and treat them as partners, not problems.
Abstinence-Only-Until-Marriage
Programs, sometimes called Sexual Risk Avoidance
Programs, teach abstinence as
the only morally correct
option of sexual expression
for teenagers. They usually censor information about contraception and condoms
for the prevention of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and unintended
pregnancy.
Abstinence-Centered Education—Another term normally used to mean abstinence-only programs.
Comprehensive Sex Education teaches about abstinence as the best method for avoiding STDs and unintended pregnancy, but also teaches about condoms and contraception to reduce the risk of unintended pregnancy and of infection with STDs, including HIV. It also teaches interpersonal and communication skills and helps young people explore their own values, goals, and options.
Abstinence-Plus Education—Programs which include information about contraception and condoms in the context of strong abstinence messages.
Abstinence-Centered Education—Another term normally used to mean abstinence-only programs.
Comprehensive Sex Education teaches about abstinence as the best method for avoiding STDs and unintended pregnancy, but also teaches about condoms and contraception to reduce the risk of unintended pregnancy and of infection with STDs, including HIV. It also teaches interpersonal and communication skills and helps young people explore their own values, goals, and options.
Abstinence-Plus Education—Programs which include information about contraception and condoms in the context of strong abstinence messages.
COMPREHENSIVE
SEX EDUCATION
|
ABSTINENCE-ONLY-UNTIL-MARRIAGE
EDUCATION
|
Teaches that sexuality is a natural, normal,
healthy part of life
|
Teaches that sexual expression outside of
marriage will have harmful social, psychological, and physical consequences
|
Teaches that abstinence from sexual
intercourse is the most effective method of preventing unintended pregnancy
and sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV
|
Teaches that abstinence from sexual
intercourse before marriage is the only acceptable behavior
|
Provides values-based education and offers
students the opportunity to explore and define their individual values as
well as the values of their families and communities
|
Teaches only one set of values as morally
correct for all students
|
Includes a wide variety of sexuality related
topics, such as human development, relationships, interpersonal skills,
sexual expression, sexual health, and society and culture
|
Limits topics to
abstinence-only-until-marriage and to the negative consequences of pre-marital
sexual activity
|
Includes accurate, factual information on
abortion, masturbation, and sexual orientation
|
Usually omits controversial topics such as
abortion, masturbation,
and sexual orientation |
Provides positive messages about sexuality
and sexual expression, including the benefits of abstinence
|
Often uses fear tactics to promote
abstinence and to limit sexual expression
|
Teaches that proper use of latex condoms,
along with water-based lubricants, can greatly reduce, but not eliminate, the
risk of unintended pregnancy and of infection with sexually transmitted
diseases (STDs) including HIV
|
Discusses condoms only in terms of failure
rates; often exaggerates condom failure rates
|
Teaches that consistent use of modern
methods of contraception can greatly reduce a couple's risk for unintended
pregnancy
|
Provides no information on forms of
contraception other than failure rates of condoms
|
Includes accurate medical information about
STDs, including HIV; teaches that individuals can avoid STDs
|
Often includes inaccurate medical
information and exaggerated statistics regarding STDs, including HIV;
suggests that STDs are aninevitable result of premarital
sexual behavior
|
Teaches that religious values can play an
important role in an individual's decisions about sexual expression; offers
students the opportunity to explore their own and their family's religious
values
|
Often promotes specific religious values
|
Teaches that a woman faced with an
unintended pregnancy has options: carrying the pregnancy to term and raising
the baby, or carrying the pregnancy to term and placing the baby for
adoption, or ending the pregnancy with an abortion
|
Teaches that carrying the pregnancy to term
and placing the baby for adoption is the onlymorally correct option for pregnant teens
|
EFFECTIVE SEX EDUCATION
Each year, U.S. teens experience as many as
850,000 pregnancies, and youth under age 25 experience about 9.1 million
sexually transmitted infections (STIs). By age 18, 70 percent of U.S. females
and 62 percent of U.S. males have initiated vaginal sex.Comprehensive sex
education is effective at assisting young people to make healthy decisions about
sex and to adopt healthy sexual behaviors. No abstinence-only-until-marriage
program has been shown to help teens delay the initiation of sex or to protect
themselves when they do initiate sex. Yet, the U.S. government has spent over
one billion dollars supporting abstinence-only-until-marriage programs.
Although the U.S. government ignores it, adolescents have a fundamental human right
to accurate and comprehensive sexual health information.
Comprehensive Sex Education Is Effective,
Does Not Promote Sexual Risks.
·
Research has identified highly effective sex education and HIV
prevention programs that affect multiple behaviors and/or achieve positive
health impacts. Behavioral outcomes have included delaying the initiation of
sex as well as reducing the frequency of sex, the number of new partners, and
the incidence of unprotected sex, and/or increasing the use of condoms and
contraception among sexually active participants.] Long-term impacts have
included lower STI and/or pregnancy rates.
·
No highly effective sex education or HIV prevention education
program is eligible for federal funding because mandates prohibit educating
youth about the benefits of condoms and contraception.
·
Evaluations of comprehensive sex education and HIV/ STI
prevention programs show that they do not increase rates of sexual initiation, do
not lower the age at
which youth initiate sex, and do not increase the frequency of sex or the number
of sex partners among sexually active youth.
·
Between 1991 and 2004, the U.S. teen birth rate fell from 62 to
41per 1,000 female teens. Some experts attribute 75 percent of the decline to
increased contraceptive use and 25 percent to delayed initiation of sex. Others
credit increased contraceptive use and delayed initiation of sex about equally.
Regardless, contraceptive use has been critical to reducing teenage pregnancy.
Abstinence-Only Programs Are Dangerous,
Ineffective, and Inaccurate.
The Society for Adolescent Medicine recently declared that
“abstinence-only programs threaten fundamental human rights to health,
information, and life.”
·
According to Columbia University researchers, virginity pledge
programs increase pledge-takers’ risk for STIs and pregnancy. The study
concluded that 88 percent of pledge-takers initiated sex prior to marriage even
though some delayed sex for a while. Rates of STIs among pledge-takers and
non-pledgers were similar, even though pledge-takers initiated sex later.
Pledge-takers were less likely to seek STI testing and less likely to use
contraception when they did have sex.
·
Evaluations of the effectiveness of state-funded
abstinence-only-until-marriage programs found no delay in first sex. In fact,
of six evaluations that assessed short-term changes in behavior, three found no
changes, two found increased sexual activity from pre- to
post-test, and one showed mixed results. Five evaluations looked for but found
no long-term impact in reducing teens’ sexual activity.
·
Analysis of data from Youth Risk Behavior surveys found that
sexual activity among high school youth declined significantly from 1991 to
1997, prior to large-scale funding of abstinence-only-until-marriage programs,
but changed little from 1999 to 2003 with federal funding of such programs.
·
Analysis of federally funded abstinence-only curricula found
that over 80 percent of curricula supported by the U.S. Department of Health
& Human Services contained false, misleading, or distorted information
about reproductive health. Specifically, they conveyed:
o False
information about the effectiveness of contraceptives;
o False
information about the risks of abortion;
o Religious
beliefs as scientific fact;
o Stereotypes
about boys and girls as scientific fact; and
o Medical
and scientific errors of fact.
Medical Organizations, Parents, and the
Public Support Comprehensive Sex Education
·
The American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of
Obstetricians & Gynecologists, American Medical Association, American
Public Health Association, Institute of Medicine, and Society for Adolescent
Medicine, among others, support comprehensive sex education, including
education about bothabstinence and
also contraception
and condoms.
·
In one study, most American adults supported sex education that
includes information about both abstinence and also contraception and condoms.
In fact, 89 percent believed that it is important for young people to have
information about contraception and prevention of STIs and that sex education
should focus on how to avoid unintended pregnancy and STIs, including HIV.
·
In another recent survey, 94 percent of adults and 93 percent of
parents said that sex education should cover contraception. Only 15 percent of
Americans wanted abstinence-only education taught in the classroom.
Characteristics of Effective Sex Education
Experts have identified critical characteristics of highly
effective sex education and HIV/STI prevention education programs. Such
programs:
- Offer
age- and culturally appropriate sexual health information in a safe
environment for participants;
- Are
developed in cooperation with members of the target community, especially
young people;
- Assist
youth to clarify their individual, family, and community values;
- Assist
youth to develop skills in communication, refusal, and negotiation;
- Provide
medically accurate information about both abstinence and also
contraception, including condoms;
- Have
clear goals for preventing HIV, other STIs, and/or teen pregnancy;
- Focus
on specific health behaviors related to the goals, with clear messages
about these behaviors;
- Address
psychosocial risk and protective factors with activities to change each
targeted risk and to promote each protective factor;
- Respect
community values and respond to community needs;
- Rely
on participatory teaching methods, implemented by trained educators and
using all the activities as designed.
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