A randomized-control study by well-respected researchers in the field of sex education has found that an abstinence program taught to African-American middle schoolers was more effective than other kinds of interventions in delaying sexual activity.
The findings differ from a number of previous studies that didn鈥檛 find evidence that abstinence-focused programs work. But the program studied differed from many abstinence efforts in its design, in that it did not stress remaining chaste until marriage.
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia, and the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada, found in their study of 662 students in 6th and 7th grade that a third of participants in an abstinence program said they had sex in the two years following the program, compared with nearly half the participants in the control group. The abstinence program consisted of eight one-hour modules taught during two sessions.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the first randomized-control study to ever demonstrate that an abstinence-only intervention is effective,鈥 said Loretta S. Jemmott, a professor of nursing at the University of Pennsylvania and one of the researchers for , which was published in this month鈥檚 issue of Archives of Pediatrics andAdolescent Medicine.
The researchers designed the abstinence intervention after they spent a lot of time discussing with youths their attitudes about sex and determining what messages might work with them to try to get them to delay sexual activity, Ms. Jemmott said.
Not 鈥楳oralistic鈥
鈥淚t was a positive intervention that did not bash sex, that wasn鈥檛 moralistic, and did not meet that definition of abstinence until marriage,鈥 she said.
Ms. Jemmott added that she鈥檚 a church-goer and the mother of a 13-year-old and wants her daughter to wait until marriage to have sex. But young people aren鈥檛 necessarily receptive to that message, she said.
鈥淲e want the children to hear that the more they wait, the better it is, and maybe they will wait until marriage,鈥 Ms. Jemmott said.
The federal government鈥檚 guidelines for abstinence programs have required that those programs teach an abstinence-until-marriage message, she said. The abstinence program that was found to be effective instead focused on activities with messages warning that having sex at a young age can interfere with one鈥檚 goals and dreams, she said.
The study also looked at two comprehensive sex education programs鈥攐ne an eight-hour program, and another a 12-hour program鈥攖hat included information about condom use. Students exposed to those approaches were less likely than participants in the control group to have multiple sex partners, the study found, but the comprehensive approaches didn鈥檛 have an effect in delaying the start of sexual activity. None of the approaches in the study showed an impact on condom use.
The researchers say in their study that African-American young people are particularly at risk for experiencing early involvement in sexual activity and its possible consequences, such as unintended pregnancies.
The results of the new study come as President Barack Obama has asked Congress not to give abstinence-based programs any funding in his proposed 2011 budget. Federal financing for such programs was zeroed out in fiscal 2010.
Advocates for abstinence programs are hoping that the new results will persuade members of Congress to restore funds.
鈥淲e鈥檙e really excited, because this signified really rigorous research that demonstrates the effectiveness of abstinence programs,鈥 said Valerie J. Huber, the executive director of the Washington-based . 鈥淲e think the timing of this study is perfect, and we encourage Congress to make a course correction.鈥
But Monica Rodriguez, the vice president for education and training for the , in New York City, said the findings don鈥檛 support such a change in course because the intervention in the study doesn鈥檛 look anything like the ones that the federal government has funded.
鈥淢any are fraught with misinformation,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey portray sex negatively. They have absolutely nothing in common with the one in this study that was found to be effective.鈥
In November, a panel of independent medical experts appointed by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that comprehensive sex education programs that teach use of contraceptives help reduce risky sexual behavior and decrease the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. The panel didn鈥檛 find evidence that abstinence-based programs do the same.
That same month, Mathematica Policy Research was awarded a contract by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to study the effectiveness of sex education programs, including abstinence-based programs, in preventing teenage pregnancy. The contract is for an eight-year, random-assignment evaluation intended to document evidence on effective ways to reduce teenage nonmarital sexual activity, pregnancy, and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.