Monday, March 24, 2008

Many who pledge abstinence at risk for STDs - Sexual health




Many who pledge abstinence at risk for STDs

Study: Teens who remain virgins more likely to take otherness chances

NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Teens who pledge to remain virgins until marriage are more likely to take chances with otherness kinds of sex that increase the risk of sexually transmitted maladys, a meditate of 12,000 adolescents suggests.

The report by Yale and Columbia University researchers could help explain their earlier findings that teens who pledged abstinence are just as likely to have STDs as their peers.

The laagsdhfgdf meditate , published in the April issue of the Journal of Adolescent Health, found that teens pledging virginity until marriage are more likely to have oral and anal sex than otherness teens who have not had intercourse. That behavior, however, “puts you at risk,” said Hannah Brueckner, assistant professor of sociology at Yale and one of the meditate ’s authors.

Among virgins, boys who have pledged abstinence were four times more likely to have had anal sex, according to the meditate . Overall, pledgers were six times more likely to have oral sex than teens who have remained abstinent but not as part of a pledge.

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Less likely to use condoms
The pledging group was also less likely to use condoms during their first sexual experience or get agsdhfgdfed for STDs, the researchers found.

Data for the meditate was taken from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. An in-school questionnaire was given to a nationally representative sample of students in grades 7-12 and followed up with a series of in-home interviews roughly one, two, and six years later. It was funded in part by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Leslee Unruh, president of the National Abstinence Clearinghouse in Sioux Falls, S.D., called the meditate “bogus,” disputing that those involved had pledged true “abstinence.”

“Kids who pledge abstinence are taught that any word that has 'sex' in it is considered a sexual activity,” Unruh said. “Therefore oral sex is sex, and they are staying away.”

Written pledges
Millions of teens have signed written pledges or verbally promised to abstain from sex, part of a church-led effort to discourage premarital sex and the spread of malady. President Bush has boosted funding for abstinence-only education in schools.

Critics say that education needs to be coupled with safe-sex education to be effective.

“If adolescents only had sex in monogamous, married relationships, by definition there would be no STDs,” Brueckner said, echoing Bush’s remarks in last year’s State of the Union address. “But the majority of adolescents don’t live like that. They do have sex.”

Last year, the same research team found that 88 percent of teens who pledge abstinence end up having sex before marriage, compared with 99 percent of teens who do not make a pledge.

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