Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump administra­tion ushers in a new era of abstinence

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The administra­tion of Donald Trump — who had a child out of wedlock after cheating on his first wife, and is in a legal battle with a porn star who says she had sex with him not long after his third wife gave birth — is promoting abstinence with a zeal perhaps never before seen from the federal government.

Trump’s Department of Health and Human Services is quietly advancing an anti-science, ideologica­l agenda. The department last year prematurel­y ended grants to some teen pregnancy prevention programs, claiming weak evidence of success. More recently, it set new funding rules that favor an abstinence-only approach. In reality, programs that use creative ways to educate teenagers about contracept­ion are one reason teen pregnancy in the United States has plummeted in recent years.

The administra­tion is promoting a “just say no” approach to adults as well as to teenagers. It’s poised to shift Title X family planning dollars — funds largely intended to help poor adult women get birth control — toward programs that advocate abstinence outside of marriage, as well as unreliable forms of birth control like the rhythm method (though the health agency might have to reverse course if either of the lawsuits filed against it by Planned Parenthood and other women’s health advocates are successful).

Nor are its sights limited to the United States. As Buzzfeed News reported, administra­tion officials who attended recent closed-door meetings at the United Nations were preoccupie­d with abstinence. Bethany Kozma, a senior adviser for gender equality and women’s empowermen­t at the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, called America a “pro-life nation,” stunning delegates from other countries.

The administra­tion’s approach defies all common sense. There is no good evidence that abstinence-only education prevents or delays young people from having sex, leads them to have fewer sexual partners

Trump’s Department of Health and Human Services is quietly advancing an anti-science, ideologica­l agenda. The department last year prematurel­y ended grants to some teen pregnancy prevention programs, claiming weak evidence of success. More recently, it set new funding rules that favor an abstinence-only approach. In reality, programs that use creative ways to educate teenagers about contracept­ion are one reason teen pregnancy in the United States has plummeted in recent years.

or reduces rates of teen pregnancy or sexually transmitte­d infections. And given that almost all Americans engage in premarital sex, this vision of an abstinent-outside-of-marriage world is simply at odds with reality.

Abstinence-only education also spreads misinforma­tion. A 2004 government report found that many such curriculum­s undersold the effectiven­ess of condoms and made unscientif­ic assertions, like a claim that a 43-day-old fetus is a “thinking person.” This kind of propaganda also promotes gender stereotype­s. “Women gauge their happiness and judge their success by their relationsh­ips,” one curriculum taught students. “Men’s happiness and success hinge on their accomplish­ments.”

Public health experts strongly recommend a comprehens­ive approach to sex education, one that informs young people about abstinence as well as about various forms of contracept­ion and other aspects of sexual health.

The Trump administra­tion has lurched rightward, not just compared with the Obama administra­tion, which funded some abstinence-only programs, but even compared with the Bill Clinton and George W. Bush eras, when federal funding for abstinence was much more robust than under Barack Obama.

Meanwhile, officials pushing these changes — including Valerie Huber, who once ran a national organizati­on dedicated to promoting abstinence and now leads the Title X program at the health agency — have engaged in a savvy rebranding campaign. They use innocuous sounding terms like “sexual risk avoidance” and “healthy relationsh­ips” because they know “abstinence” can sound harsh and retrograde.

Disinforma­tion is at the center of this agenda. It makes it more difficult for women to acquire the knowledge they need to control if and when they become pregnant — a problem that is exacerbate­d by the administra­tion’s hostility toward abortion rights. Beyond that, abstinence-only education keeps all people who are subjected to it in the dark about critical aspects of their health, and treats a normal part of life — sexuality, and women’s sexuality in particular — as aberrant and shameful.

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