If
we want to help our young people grow up into
healthy adults, ready to assume the responsibilities
of parenthood, then we must help them to live by
God’s plan for marriage and spousal love. Simply
put, that means total abstinence before marriage,
and total fidelity in marriage. That is what
Abstinence-Only Programs teach. |
THE
CASE FOR ABSTINENCE: Do ‘Plan B’ and other contraceptives
shape society? Part I of 2
By Fletcher Doyle
Part 1
When the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported
in December that the teen birth rate in 2006 had increased
by 3 percent over 2005, reversing a 15-year trend in which
it had decreased, the finger-pointing began. And in many
media outlets, the fingers were pointed squarely at
abstinence education.
To pick one example, a New York Times reporter wrote that
the finding “fueled the debate about whether the Bush
administration’s abstinence-only education efforts were
working.” The president of Planned Parenthood assured the
Times that it isn’t.
Given the fact that abstinence-only education has been
around for several years and that this big change was
sudden, it seems legitimate to ask if the right suspect has
been fingered. And if abstinence- only education isn’t
responsible, then what is? A case can be made that the
culprit is something its supporters claim is the answer to
unwanted pregnancies and abortions: Plan B— which also goes
by the names emergency contraception and the morning-after
pill.
To understand how this can possibly be, you have to look at
the long-term effect on society of inexpensive and effective
birth control, which is the element that makes comprehensive
sex education different than abstinence- only. This is what
Nobel Prizewinning economist George Akerlof, Janet L. Yellen
and Michael L. Katz did in a 1996 paper titled “An Analysis
of Out-of-Wedlock Childbearing in the United States.” They
were searching for the reasons why there was a huge increase
in illegitimate births, single motherhood and abortions
after the mid-1960s. Some people blamed welfare, others the
lack of jobs in some sectors of society. Akerlof et al put
the onus on the pill and other new forms of contraception.
The pill’s big effect was on the relationship of men and
women. Whereas men and women had always had premarital sex,
before the advent of oral contraception there was an
understanding that if the woman got pregnant the man would
marry her. There was a study of birth and marriage records
from the turn of the 20th century that showed that 30
percent to 50 percent of all first children were conceived
before the wedding.
The pill, which became widely available in 1965, is called a
“technology shock” that altered the relationship equation in
several ways.
One is that if pregnancy is now the choice of the woman,
then marriage and child support are now the choice of the
man. Another is that the presence of women who will have
premarital intercourse without an expectation of marriage —
something the pill allows — puts women who wanted to wait
until marriage to have sex at a disadvantage in the
competition for mates.
Francis Fukuyama wrote in his book, “The Great Disruption,”
that the primary result of the sexual revolution kicked off
by the pill was that men were no longer responsible for the
women they got pregnant.
Among the results documented by Akerlof and his co-authors
was a jump by 1970 in sexual activity among girls under the
age of 16, the end of the shotgun marriage, the almost total
disappearance of virgins at the altar and the increase in
illegitimate births, single motherhood and abortions.
Birth rates among teens climbed and then skyrocketed in the
late 1980s, hitting a peak of more than 60 women per
thousand, ages 15 to 19, in 1991. From there the numbers
declined through 2005. In a July 2007 story trumpeting the
drop in 2005, the Washington Post credited primarily a
roughly 50 percent increase in the number of high school
students using condoms on their last encounter (46 percent
in 1991 versus 63 percent in 2005) and to a lesser extent a
13.3 percent decline in the number of teens who reported
having had sexual intercourse that year (54 percent in 1991
versus 47 percent in 2005).
Manipulating statistics can be done to support any point of
view, but there are a few things we know that make the
Post’s conclusions seem dubious. We know that a sexually
active girl who uses no birth control has a 90 percent
chance of getting pregnant in one year. We know that
contraceptive failure rates among first-year users —
primarily the young — are far higher than among the general
population.
An article published in Family Planning Perspectives, which
is related to Planned Parenthood, reports that the failure
rate for condoms for first-year users is 15 percent. It also
reports that failure rates are highest among cohabiting and
other unmarried women, the poor and African- Americans.
Girls greatly reduce their odds of getting pregnant if they
use a condom during intercourse, but their odds of getting
burned are still only about the same as surviving Russian
roulette.
Abstinence also has been blamed for the huge increase in
sexually transmitted diseases among the young. However, if
condoms are supposed to make sex safe and we have seen a
large increase in condom usage among the young, then we
would expect to see a drop in STDs. This clearly has not
happened.
We also know that 54 percent of all women having abortions
used contraception in the month they got pregnant; of the
women using condoms, 14 percent were using them correctly.
Imperfect usage is the primary cause of contraceptive
failure. What we also know is that those teens who did not
have sexual intercourse had a 100 percent chance of not
getting pregnant. How many of these teens were affected by
an abstinence- only program? We have no way of knowing. But
to those who claim abstinence education doesn’t work, the
Heritage Foundation published a list of 10 programs that
significantly reduced, among other things, teen pregnancy,
the age of first intercourse and sexual activity.
One example is the Not Me, Not Now program in Monroe County
that targeted 9-to 14- year-olds. It recorded a drop in the
sexual activity rate from 46.6 percent to 31.6 percent and a
drop in the pregnancy rate for girls ages 15 through 17 from
63.4 pregnancies per 1,000 girls to 49.5 pregnancies per
1,000.
Part 2
There are
reasons abstinence-only programs can’t be 100 percent
effective. They are dwarfed in numbers by comprehensive
sexual education programs, so their effectiveness is
mitigated because girls are still under pressure to have sex
in the competition for boyfriends. The reason three out of
four teen girls (and half of teen boys) give for having
intercourse is their boyfriends wanted them to. But this
isn’t anything new.
What is new is the growing presence of Plan B. Newsweek
reported in 2006 that “Planned Parenthood gave out about 1
million emergency contraceptives— most were Plan B— in 2004,
up from 75,000 in 1999.” It also said that some college
students were using it as their primary birth control and
that having it on hand made them “less reliant on
traditional birth control.”
This is a recipe for disaster. The Newsweek story said Plan
B is 90 percent effective, which is way below the
effectiveness levels of other oral contraceptives, but that
rate is in question. A 2007 story in Gynecology and
Obstetrics states, “the published efficacy figures — on
average, approximately 80 percent — may overstate actual
efficacy, possibly quite substantially. Clearly, if the
method is weakly efficacious, it is unlikely to produce a
major reduction in unintended pregnancy no matter how often
women use it.”
But if more young women are using it and it is far less
effective at preventing pregnancy, we can expect to see an
increase in unwanted pregnancies. Plan B is a sham in other
ways. In that same article in Gynecology and Obstetrics, the
man who claimed Plan B would reduce unwanted pregnancies by
50 percent, James Tressell, has “conceded that 23 published
studies from 10 countries disprove his claim. According to
every one of the 23 studies, published between 1998 and
2006, easier access to EC fails to achieve any statistically
significant reduction in rates of unintended pregnancy and
abortion.”
Here are a few things we know about girls under the age of
14 having sex. The organization Preventing Teen Pregnancy
reports it is almost universally unwanted by the girls. A
study of girls in California and the males who got them
pregnant, by Mike Males at the University of California-
Irvine, showed that the girls were vulnerable in that they
“may want to become ‘adults’ more quickly to escape an
unhappy or deprived home environment” and that the fathers
were older men (the younger the mother, the larger the age
group between her and the father).
Of the mothers from 11 to 15 years old, 91 percent of the
fathers were older — not peers — and 50 percent of the males
were beyond high school age. Among all teen mothers, 68
percent of the fathers were over the age of 20.
In a study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics
and Gynecology on the role of male sexual partners and
relationships in determining whether women seek emergency
contraception when needed, it was found that “factors
measuring power dynamics, such as male dominant decision
making and pressure for sex as well as a strong desire to
avoid pregnancy on the part of the male partner have a
significant association with the use of EC. However,
relationship factors known to be associated with use of
other contraceptive methods, such as communication,
satisfaction and commitment, show no association with EC
use.”
Plan B leaves vulnerable young girls, whose only weapon
against the unwanted sexual advances of men is the fear of
pregnancy, defenseless. The man can say, “Call me tonight
and take two pills in the morning.” The problem is, those
pills don’t work as well as advertised. Our society’s
response to teen pregnancy has been to address the symptoms
and not the cause. A middle school in Portland, Maine,
responded to pregnancies among its students by making birth
control pills available to girls as young as 11. Texas Gov.
Rick Perry issued an executive order making it mandatory
that all girls entering sixth grade in 2008 be vaccinated
with Gardasil, which prevents some forms of cervical cancer
that are caused by the STD human papilloma virus. This just
keeps us on a path that is leading in the wrong direction, a
path that is having a negative impact on the welfare of our
country.
STDs have become epidemic and, according to a March 2006
article in Newsweek, are in part to blame for a 20 percent
increase of infertility among the young since 2005. Suicide
rates among sexually active teens are much higher than among
those who abstain. And the incidence of single motherhood is
increasing in all age groups.
The percentage of children born to unwed mothers has jumped
from 5.8 percent in 1960 to 36 percent today. The percentage
in the African- American community is nearly 80 percent.
Single motherhood is the most common determining factor
among those living in poverty, and with it comes a host of
social problems and expenses.
Akerlof and his co-authors wrote that the pill, which
carried such promise, led slowly to the feminization of
poverty. But they also point out that turning back the clock
on birth control would only exacerbate the problem, exposing
women to men who, as cultural anthropologist Lionel Tiger
put it, have come to expect uncommitted intercourse if only
because that is their experience. Akerlof proposes mandatory
child support as a way of forcing young men to take some
responsibility for the children they father.
Recent headlines, in the wake of the pregnancy of
16-year-old Jamie Lynn Spears, have shouted that teen
pregnancy has become cool. There is no longer any stigma
attached to single motherhood. All of this is harmful to
women.
We need to restore the sense of commitment between sexually
active people that was the norm before the advent of the
pill. To do that we need a commitment from all areas of
society. It will take an effort on the scale of the
no-smoking campaign and it will take time.
We have the 43 years since the start of the sexual
revolution to undo. We have made smokers pariahs, banned
them from public places and shown through graphic television
commercials the physical effects of their behavior. We can
do the same thing to attack teen pregnancy.
Call it abstinence, call it character-based, call it
comprehensive, but it won’t succeed unless we find a way to
instill a feeling of responsibility into young men toward
young women, who have borne the brunt of our safe sex
policies. We should teach men to respect women, and not have
intercourse with them until they are ready to care for the
life they may be creating.
Plan B won’t work. It’s time to come up with Plan A.
Fletcher Doyle is an editor in the sports department at The
News. fdoyle@buffnews.com
- back to
Q & A --