Study Examines STD Rates of Teen Virgins

Drift3r

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Jun 3, 2003
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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040309/ap_on_he_me/virginity_study_3

Study Examines STD Rates of Teen Virgins

Tue Mar 9, 4:30 PM ET

By JASON STRAZIUSO, Associated Press Writer

PHILADELPHIA - Teens who make a one-time pledge to remain virgins until marriage catch sexually transmitted diseases about as often as those who don't pledge abstinence, according to a study of the sex lives of 12,000 adolescents.

Those who make a public pledge to delay sex also wind up having fewer sex partners and get married earlier, the research shows. But the two groups' STD rates were statistically similar.

One of the problems, researchers found, is that virginity "pledgers" are less likely to use condoms.

"It's difficult to simultaneously prepare for sex and say you're not going to have sex," said Peter Bearman, chairman of Columbia University's sociology department, who co-authored the study with Hannah Bruckner of Yale University.

"The message is really simple: 'Just say no' may work in the short term but doesn't work in the long term."

Data from the study, presented Tuesday at the National STD Prevention Conference, was taken from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. That study was funded in part by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (news - web sites).

The analysis also found that in communities where at least 20 percent of adolescents pledged to remain virgins, the STD rates for everyone combined was 8.9 percent. In communities with fewer than 7 percent pledgers, the STD rate was 5.5 percent.

"It is the combination of hidden sex and unsafe sex that creates a world where people underestimate the risk of STDs," Bearman said.

Critics of abstinence-only education saw the findings as evidence that adolescents benefit from sex education.

"It's a tragedy if we withhold from these kids information about how not to get STDs or not to get pregnant," said Dorothy Mann, executive director of the Family Planning Council, an organization dedicated to reproductive health services.

But Pat Fagan, who researches family and cultural issues at the Heritage Foundation, cautioned that one-time pledges were different from abstinence-only education, which he said takes years of support and education. He noted that the virginity pledges delayed sex and led to fewer partners.

"It shows the power of the pledges by themselves," he said. "It also shows that alone, a one-time pledge is not enough. Anyone connected with the abstinence movement would never say it's enough."

The study first questioned 12- to 18-year-olds and followed up on them six years later as adults. It found that the STD rates for whites who pledged virginity was 2.8 percent compared with 3.5 percent for those who didn't pledge.

For blacks, it was 18.1 percent and 20.3 percent. For Hispanics, it was 6.7 percent and 8.6 percent.

Bearman said the differences were not statistically significant. Overall rates combining all races wouldn't be valid, he said.

Donald Orr, director of adolescent medicine at Indiana University, said he hopes the study helps move sex education from a morality issue to a public health discussion.

"An environment where the only protection is not having sex creates the view that your risk for getting an STD is very low, and obviously it isn't," Orr said.



The study's other findings:

_59 percent of males who did not pledge abstinence used a condom during sex; only 40 percent of male pledgers used a condom.

_28 percent of female non-pledgers were tested for STDs in the previous year, compared to 14 percent of female pledgers.

_99 percent of non-pledgers and 88 percent of pledgers have sex before marriage.

___

On the Net:

http://www.stdconference.org
 

myusername

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Jun 8, 2003
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Originally posted by: Drift3r
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040309/ap_on_he_me/virginity_study_3

But Pat Fagan, who researches family and cultural issues at the Heritage Foundation, cautioned that one-time pledges were different from abstinence-only education, which he said takes years of support and education. He noted that the virginity pledges delayed sex and led to fewer partners.

"It shows the power of the pledges by themselves," he said.

Actually I'm not so sure. Aren't the type of kids who would actually do the pledge thing coming from a background that is predisposed to that sort of thing? If not (i.e. if they passed the pledge around the room, rather than forced them to sign it at sunday school) then the pledge itself is a psychological pre-selector for that type of behavior. IOW, the pledge ain't worth dick ('scuse the pun, I had to)

It found that the STD rates ... For blacks, it was 18.1 percent and 20.3 percent.
Now that's a depressing statistic. If some kind researcher would now correlate the difference in STD rates between racial lines with a difference in prophylactic use between racial lines, we would really have something here ...
 

ReiAyanami

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Sep 24, 2002
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making the pledge and keeping it are two different things. its like promising tax cuts for the middle class, not just the wealthy
 

Genesys

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Nov 10, 2003
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Originally posted by: ReiAyanami
making the pledge and keeping it are two different things. its like promising tax cuts for the middle class, not just the wealthy

good thing the tax cut promise was kept!
 

myusername

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Jun 8, 2003
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Splain to me again why my refund this year was smaller than last year? Oh, that's right, I'm in the lower bracket. Now splain to me why my mututal fund is making .37% interest? Oh that's right, our economy is foundering with little B at the helm.
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
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Originally posted by: myusername
Splain to me again why my refund this year was smaller than last year? Oh, that's right, I'm in the lower bracket. Now splain to me why my mututal fund is making .37% interest? Oh that's right, our economy is foundering with little B at the helm.

What was your tax liability this year vs. last as well as AGI?

Just because your refund was lower doesn't mean your taxes were higher.
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
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Originally posted by: conjur
Originally posted by: myusername
Splain to me again why my refund this year was smaller than last year? Oh, that's right, I'm in the lower bracket. Now splain to me why my mututal fund is making .37% interest? Oh that's right, our economy is foundering with little B at the helm.

What was your tax liability this year vs. last as well as AGI?

Just because your refund was lower doesn't mean your taxes were higher.

he said he was in the lower bracket...
 

Shad0hawK

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May 26, 2003
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Originally posted by: myusername
Splain to me again why my refund this year was smaller than last year? Oh, that's right, I'm in the lower bracket. Now splain to me why my mututal fund is making .37% interest? Oh that's right, our economy is foundering with little B at the helm.

i do not know about you my refund was bigger, and i am not "wealthy". maybe you have an idiot doing your taxes. and if you did your own, i really meant no insult. ;)



 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
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Amazing... A thread about STD rates of teen virgins, and all but two posts were about the Bush tax cut.

Like ReiAyanami said, making the pledge and keeping the pledge are two different things. In their study, 99% of non-pledgers and 88% of pledgers had sex before marriage. Why would they expect to find substantial differences in STD rates when the pre-marital sex rates are so close? And yet they blame it on abstinance education rendering them unable to practice safe sex. When you combine the percentage who use condoms with the fact that the STD rates were so "close," you might conclude that the pledgers chose their partners more wisely - I'd bet that their partners had fewer past partners than the non-pledgers.

They say the differences are not statistically significant, but I wonder what level of significance they're using. 3.5 for non-pledgers and 2.8 for pledgers (a differnce of .7, or 20%) sounds significant to me. The sample size is 12,000.

One statistic that is noticably absent are the STD rates for the teens that DO remain virgins until they marry. I'd bet that's pretty low...
 

nutxo

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May 20, 2001
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I thought it was because a lot of kids think oral sex isnt actually sex. I read somewhere that most think they cant catch anything unless thay have intercourse.