UGA study: Higher pregnancy and birth rates in states with abstinence-only sex ed programs in schools

Most of the research on abstinence-only sex education programs in schools has found the programs don’t work and can backfire.

Now, a new study out of UGA reaffirms that finding.

From UGA:

States that prescribe abstinence-only sex education programs in public schools have significantly higher teenage pregnancy and birth rates than states with more comprehensive sex education programs, researchers from the University of Georgia have determined.

The researchers looked at teen pregnancy and birth data from 48 U.S. states to evaluate the effectiveness of those states’ approaches to sex education, as prescribed by local laws and policies.

“Our analysis adds to the overwhelming evidence indicating that abstinence-only education does not reduce teen pregnancy rates,” said Kathrin Stanger-Hall, assistant professor of plant biology and biological sciences in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

Hall is first author on the resulting paper, which has been published online in the journal PLoS ONE.

The study is the first large-scale evidence that the type of sex education provided in public schools has a significant effect on teen pregnancy rates, Hall said.

“This clearly shows that prescribed abstinence-only education in public schools does not lead to abstinent behavior,” said David Hall, second author and assistant professor of genetics in the Franklin College. “It may even contribute to the high teen pregnancy rates in the U.S. compared to other industrialized countries.”

Along with teen pregnancy rates and sex education methods, Hall and Stanger-Hall looked at the influence of socioeconomic status, education level, access to Medicaid waivers and ethnicity of each state’s teen population.

Even when accounting for these factors, which could potentially impact teen pregnancy rates, the significant relationship between sex education methods and teen pregnancy remained: the more strongly abstinence education is emphasized in state laws and policies, the higher the average teenage pregnancy and birth rates.

“Because correlation does not imply causation, our analysis cannot demonstrate that emphasizing abstinence causes increased teen pregnancy. However, if abstinence education reduced teen pregnancy as proponents claim, the correlation would be in the opposite direction,” said Stanger-Hall.

The paper indicates that states with the lowest teen pregnancy rates were those that prescribed comprehensive sex and/or HIV education, covering abstinence alongside proper contraception and condom use. States whose laws stressed the teaching of abstinence until marriage were significantly less successful in preventing teen pregnancies.

These results come at an important time for legislators. A new evidence-based Teen Pregnancy Prevention Initiative was signed into federal law in December 2009 and awarded $114 million for implementation. However, federal abstinence-only funding was renewed for 2010 and beyond by including $250 million of mandatory abstinence-only funding as part of an amendment to the Senate Finance Committee’s health-reform legislation.

With two types of federal funding programs available, legislators of individual states now have the opportunity to decide which type of sex education—and which funding option—to choose for their state and possibly reconsider their state’s sex education policies for public schools, while pursuing the ultimate goal of reducing teen pregnancy rates.

Stanger-Hall and Hall conducted this large-scale analysis to provide scientific evidence to inform this decision.  “Advocates for continued abstinence-only education need to ask themselves: If teens don’t learn about human reproduction, including safe sexual health practices to prevent unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases, as well as how to plan their reproductive adult life in school, then when should they learn it and from whom?” said Stanger-Hall.

–From Maureen Downey, for the AJC Get Schooled blog

113 comments Add your comment

AJinCobb

December 3rd, 2011
1:04 pm

@HS Math Teacher,

Wow … what does that comment say about you? Why ever would you write that rather than click on the link in the original story and look at the actual data? NM, AZ, and TX are the top 3 states. “Highest concentration of black folks” you think?

HS Math Teacher

December 3rd, 2011
2:11 pm

It says that I’m basing my statement on direct observation. I’ve taught for over 20 years, and I have 4 or 5 students every year totin’ the melon. Rarely is it a white girl. It also says that I can be impulsive, and shoot from the hip. I’m usually right, though. Lastly, it says that I’m not worried about folks’ opinion, and I’m not PC. Enlighten me so I don’t have to do too much clicking & reading… has New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas led the nation consistently? What race were most of pregnant teens? Hispanic, Caucasian, or African-American?

FYI

December 3rd, 2011
2:41 pm

Please note that the UGA study leads off by stating that 2005 data was used, as the most recent to be found. And if you Google “teenage pregnancy rates nationally,” you won’t find data more recent than 2008.

FYI

December 3rd, 2011
3:01 pm

The UGA study may use 2005 data, but the National Center for Health Statistics gives figures on teenage pregnancies for 2010 (the lowest percentages ever):
Number per 1000,
* White, 23.5
* Black, 51.5
* Hispanic, 55.7
* Native, 38.7
* Asian, 10.9

FYI

December 3rd, 2011
3:03 pm

That’s number of births per 1000.

Maureen Downey

December 3rd, 2011
4:15 pm

@HS Math Teacher: Your statement is wrong/
States ranked by rates of pregnancy among women age 15-19 (pregnancies per thousand):
1. Nevada (113)
2. Arizona (104)
3. Mississippi (103)
4. New Mexico (103)
5. Texas (101)
6. Florida (97)
7. California (96)
8. Georgia (95)
9. North Carolina (95)
10. Arkansas (93)

Anonmom

December 3rd, 2011
10:12 pm

Seems cultural though…. I’ll bet it’s more SES than anything else and that the vast majority of unwed teens (though not all) are from homes without dads…. such that the cycles continue.

V for Vendetta

December 4th, 2011
5:11 pm

HS Math Teacher,

Perhaps you should change your chat name to Racist HS Math Teacher.

Anonmom

December 4th, 2011
9:29 pm

Does anyone else find it really interesting/intriguing that “Asian” has the lowest/per 1000 teen pregnancy rate of all the breakdowns? They also have the “reputation” for high academic achievement. If you read the article (and, probably, the book) by “Tiger Mom” on the differences in Eastern and Western parenting I think we’d start to uncover some of the “cultural” “answers” — the expectations by parents of kids between Eastern and Western cultures are very different (I’m speaking as a Westerner without too much knowledge of Eastern culture but as a casual observer). The Tiger Mom Wall Street Journal article spoke about her making her 6 year old practice a very difficult piano piece until she had it mastered — without outside reward and how that gave her the sense of internal accomplishment once she mastered it that American kids lack by rewarding everything such that they never gain mastery and, therefore, never have any self confidence, ergo, self esteem. I think there’s something here….

Anonmom

December 4th, 2011
9:29 pm

Enter your comments here

Anonmom

December 4th, 2011
9:34 pm

Does anyone else see something interesting/intriguing about the lowest group being Asian? They also have a reputation for high academic achievement. I think it may have something to do with parental expectations towards their children. There was an interesting article (and book… I read the article) by “Tiger Mom” in the Wall Street Journal (or NYT) about the differences in parenting between western and eastern cultures and how it impacts self esteem and how when “Tiger Mom” pushed her daughter to practice piano to mastery it gave her internal self esteem rather than the superficial garbage we Americans give our kids when everyone gets trophies and awards and when we don’t keep score — no self esteem is gained… I think there may be something here.

Anonmom

December 5th, 2011
9:44 am

sorry for duplicate comment… trouble posting.

[...] abstinence-only sex education programs, which are a famously religious, right-wing concept that we all know don’t work. So if you were afraid of your children getting an inferior education or being indoctrinated in a [...]