http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=874212Teen pregnancies were up three percent in 2006, which is the latest reporting period available. Proponents of comprehensive sex education are blaming abstinence programs for the increase.
The figures come from the Alan Guttmacher Institute, a strong opponent of abstinence education. But Valerie Huber of the National Abstinence Education Association reports that that organization is simply putting its own twist on old information as a way to gain more support.
Valerie Huber"They're just re-circulating data that we've known for months -- but they're putting their own spin on this to castigate abstinence education and put in a plug for the new teen pregnancy prevention funds, which is just another way of saying more money for contraceptive education," she explains.
Guttmacher and others are actually placing the blame for the increase in pregnancies on the abstinence approach funded during the Bush administration, claiming that abstinence funding doubled from 2000 to 2003 to $120 million, and that by 2008 that amount reached $176 million. Huber points out, however, that abstinence education received only 25 percent of the funding earmarked for teen sex-education programs.
"[Guttmacher's argument] doesn't make sense," she argues. "It's an oversimplification of the problem, and it's just obviously a P.R. stunt."
She says that if the Guttmacher Institute's thinking is extended, it must mean the proponents of comprehensive sex education are 75 percent to blame for the increase in pregnancies.