Audio By Carbonatix
New research suggests ‘abstinence-only sex education’ does little to dissuade teenagers from having sex. Just saying no may not be an effective strategy in keeping kids from having sex, a newly released study reports.
The evaluation, conducted by Mathematica Policy Research Inc. on behalf of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, examined the impact of the abstinence-only-until-marriage programs funded under the 1996 federal welfare reform law.
Through the study, more than 2,000 children were randomly assigned to groups that received abstinence-only counselling and those that received no counselling. Over the next four to six years, numerous surveys were done to determine the impact of these programs on the behaviour of the kids.
Researchers found no evidence that these abstinence-only programs increased rates of sexual abstinence.
The study also showed that the students participating in these abstinence-only programs had a similar number of sexual partners as their peers not in the programs, and that the age of first sex was similar for both groups too.
"The basic takeaway message is that there are no differences between the two groups on any behavioural outcomes," says lead study author, Christopher Trenholm, a senior researcher at Mathematica Policy Research.
Debate Continues Over Effectiveness
Some sexuality experts say the study only confirms what most sexuality researchers have already known that abstinence-only programs simply do not work.
"The data coming forth now is simple proof, solid, unassailable evidence to back up what many of us have known from the get-go," says Joy Davidson, a certified sex therapist in New York City. But the debate still continues on which is the most effective way to help particularly the youth to abstain from sex till marriage since sex has become a very normal element in most relationships. Even the religious principle of not fornicating before marriage is now totally ignored by most. So what’s the way forward? Is abstinence even possible for most of today’s youth? What do you think?
SOURCE: ABC NEWS
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ablakwa clarifies Ghana’s free visa policy for Africans, emphasising security and digital reform
21 minutes -
Kwahu Business Forum 2026: President Mahama to dine with business leaders
44 minutes -
Ghana announces free visas for all African countries from May 25
49 minutes -
Artemis II leaves Earth’s orbit on track for far side of the Moon
49 minutes -
I’ll build a waterfall in Gomoa – A Plus
50 minutes -
Cuba to release more than 2,000 prisoners, as pressure from US mounts
54 minutes -
Brutal Fruit Spritzer hosts first-ever Pink Table
1 hour -
Invest in juvenile football to build strong national teams – Alhaji Grusah
3 hours -
Myanmar’s coup leader who set off a brutal civil war becomes president
3 hours -
Ghana risks continued currency weakness without ownership reforms – Joe Jackson
3 hours -
Reducing petroleum taxes won’t affect 2026 budget – Amin Adam
3 hours -
Amin Adam urges gov’t to cut fuel taxes amid windfall oil revenue
4 hours -
Arlo Parks: ‘I got out of my head and into my body’
4 hours -
Stanbic Bank posts 38% profit growth as earnings momentum strengthens in 2025
5 hours -
PAC emphasises documentation key to curbing financial irregularities
5 hours
