Abstinence Education Does Not Impact Sexual Behavior
"This is the first study of multi-year abstinence programs, and it is one of the few that has tracked its sample members for as long as six years."
(April 14, 2007) -- A recent study of four abstinence education programs
finds that the
programs had no effect on the sexual abstinence of youth. But
it also finds that youth in these programs were no more likely to have
unprotected sex, a concern that has been raised by some critics of these
programs. The study found that youth in the four evaluated programs were no
more likely than youth not in the programs to have abstained from sex in the
four to six years after they began participating in the study. Youth in both
groups who reported having had sex also had similar numbers of sexual
partners and had initiated sex at the same average age.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Flaws Seen in U.S. Sex Ed. Programs
A
2004 congressional survey identified flaws in the federally funded
abstinence-only education programs. The report criticized many of the programs
for teaching misleading and inaccurate information about sex.
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“This is the first study of multi-year abstinence programs, and it is one
of the few that has tracked its sample members for as long as six years,”
notes Christopher Trenholm, the project director and a senior researcher at
Mathematica. “The study finds that the sexual abstinence of students in four
programs selected for the study was much the same as that of students who
did not participate in these programs.”
“Some policymakers and health educators have criticized the Title V,
Section 510 abstinence education programs, questioning whether the focus on
abstinence puts teens at risk of having unprotected sex,” says Barbara
Devaney, one of the study's principal investigators and vice president and
director of Human Services Research at Mathematica. “The evaluation findings
suggest that this is not the case. Participants in the abstinence education
programs and nonparticipating youth had similar rates of unprotected sex at
first intercourse and over the past 12 months.”
The study findings highlight the challenges faced by programs aiming to
reduce adolescent sexual activity. Two lessons are important for future
programming in this area:
Targeting youth at young ages may not be sufficient. Most Title V,
Section 510 abstinence education programs are implemented in upper
elementary and middle schools and most are completed before youth enter high
school. The findings from this study provide no evidence that abstinence
programs implemented at these grades reduce sexual activity of youth during
their high school years. However, the findings provide no information on the
effects programs might have if they were implemented in high school or began
at earlier ages but continued through high school.
Peer support for abstinence erodes during adolescence. Peer support for
abstinence is a significant predictor of later sexual activity. Although the
four abstinence programs had at most a small impact on this measure in the
short term and no impact in the long term, this finding suggests that
promoting support for abstinence among peer networks should be an important
feature of future abstinence programs.
The study used the most rigorous, scientifically based approach to
measure the impacts of the programs. Much like a clinical trial in medicine,
this approach compares outcomes for two statistically equivalent groups—a
program group and a control group—created by random assignment (similar to a
lottery). Youth in the program group were eligible to receive the abstinence
education program services, while those in the control group were not, and
received only the usual health, family life, and sex education services
available in their schools and communities. When coupled with sufficiently
large sample sizes, longitudinal surveys conducted by independent data
collectors, and appropriate statistical methods, this design is able to
produce highly credible estimates of the impacts of the programs being
studied.
Youth were enrolled in the study sample over three consecutive
school years, from fall 1999 through fall 2001, and randomly assigned within
schools to either the program or the control group. The results in this
report are based on a survey given to 2,057 youth in 2005 and 2006, roughly
four to six years after they began participating in the study; 1,209 had
participated in one of the Title V, Section 510 abstinence education
programs and 848 had been assigned to the control group. By the time the
last follow-up survey was completed, youth had entered their mid to late
teens, permitting the researchers to reliably measure program impacts on
teen sexual activity and other risk behaviors.
By: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
Source: RxPG
Last updated: 04/07
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