This is a blog for the Mental Health Policy Class at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work.
Showing posts with label sex education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sex education. Show all posts
April 8, 2008
One in 4 Teen Girls Has a Sexually Transmitted Disease
More than 3 million teenaged girls have at least one sexually transmitted disease (STD), a new government study suggests. The most severely affected are African-American teens. In fact, 48 percent of African-American teenaged girls have an STD, compared with 20 percent of white teenaged girls. "What we found is alarming," Dr. Sara Forhan, from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said during a teleconference Tuesday. "One in four female adolescents in the U.S. has at least one of the four most common STDs that affects women." "These numbers translate into 3.2 million young women nationwide who are infected with an STD," Forhan said. "This means that far too many young women are at risk of the serious health effects of untreated STDs, including infertility and cervical cancer."
March 16, 2008
STDs and Abstinence Only Education
A disturbing national study released this week has found that one in four girls and young women is infected with at least one of four common sexually transmitted diseases. The statistics are even more staggering for African American teenagers ages 14 to 19 - nearly half had a sexually transmitted disease, compared with 20 percent for white teenagers. The numbers are another indication that the White House's insistence on reserving millions of sex-education dollars for abstinence-only programs isn't working.
Certainly, abstinence is the best way to avoid STDs, but many teenagers are making the decision to have sex, and they need to know there are other ways to reduce the danger of disease or pregnancy. One researcher called the new study, presented at a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conference in Chicago, "alarming" and evidence that the infections are a major public health threat. The diseases monitored in the study were human papillomavirus (HPV), chlamydia, genital herpes and trichomoniasis, a common parasite. The first national study of these diseases found that 15 percent of the infected girls had more than one STD. The findings clearly show that America can no longer afford the Bush administration's $1 billion abstinence program. Too much is at stake.
Certainly, abstinence is the best way to avoid STDs, but many teenagers are making the decision to have sex, and they need to know there are other ways to reduce the danger of disease or pregnancy. One researcher called the new study, presented at a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conference in Chicago, "alarming" and evidence that the infections are a major public health threat. The diseases monitored in the study were human papillomavirus (HPV), chlamydia, genital herpes and trichomoniasis, a common parasite. The first national study of these diseases found that 15 percent of the infected girls had more than one STD. The findings clearly show that America can no longer afford the Bush administration's $1 billion abstinence program. Too much is at stake.
July 21, 2007
The Politics of Sex
Despite years of evidence clearly showing that these [abstinence] programs are ineffective and harmful, federal funding continues at over $200 million a year and growing. Under the Bush administration, abstinence-only subsidies have gushed forth -- creating a deluge of funding for far-right religious groups, amidst a dearth of federal oversight. . . . In reality 95 percent of Americans do have sex before marriage, most before they reach age 19. We must stop funding harmful and ineffective abstinence-only programs and instead support a more comprehensive approach to sexuality education and reproductive health.
Labels:
abstinence,
Politics,
sex education,
Surgeon General
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)