Chicago Sun-Times

As marriage rates fall, reports of STDs rise

- BY SCOTT PHELPS Scott Phelps is executive director of the Abstinence & Marriage Education Partnershi­p near Chicago.

Marriage rates in the United States are at an all- time low. Reported cases of sexually transmitte­d diseases are at an all- time high. These two statistics share a clear and direct relationsh­ip, although you would not know it from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s annual reporting on the STD epidemic. What is so hard about saying what is true?

In 1983, there were no reported cases of chlamydia. In 1984, the CDC recorded 7,594 cases nationwide, and after 32 years of prevention efforts, reported chlamydial infections have reached an all time high of 1,526,658 cases in 2015. That’s an increase of 20,103 percent.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, taxpayers spend $ 94,000,000 per year on STD prevention through the CDC. Despite this “prevention” effort, the CDC claims that: “The cost of STDs to the U. S. health care system is estimated to be as much as $ 16 billion annually.” This is a case study in failed government­al policy.

To no one’s surprise, STD prevention director Dr. Jonathan Mermin explains that the problem is a lack of funding: “STD prevention resources across the nation are stretched thin,” he said. “In recent years more than half of state and local STD programs have experience­d budget cuts.”

This is the typical government response: “We need more money!” One might reasonably ask, “What did you do with the money we already gave you?” No. The CDC doesn’t need more money. It needs common sense, rooted in fact.

In releasing the data on record high STD rates, the CDC offers the following solution:

“Talk openly about STDs, get tested regularly, and reduce risk by using condoms or practicing mutual monogamy if sexually active.”

Really? That’s it? This is the same thing the CDC says every year as STDs continue to rise. The American people should mark the new CDC report with an “F” and hand it back to the agency along with this teacher’s note: “Your paper is missing the key component in solving this problem.”

That missing component is the clear, objective fact that the best way to avoid STDs is to reserve all sexual activity for marriage.

Remarkably, the 154- page CDC report does not mention the word marriage. Not once. This is problemati­c because marriage is the only true remedy for the spread of STDs. Those who save sex for marriage and remain faithful eliminate their risk of exposure to STDs. Done.

As marriage rates continue to fall, the correspond­ing increase in STD rates is not coincident­al, and until 1999, the CDC regularly acknowledg­ed this clear associatio­n. The 1995- 1999 CDC STD Surveillan­ce Reports state: “During the past two decades, the age of initiation of sexual activity has steadily decreased and age at first marriage has increased, resulting in increases in premarital sexual experience. . . .”

Non- marital sexual activity with multiple partners is the singular cause of the proliferat­ion of STDs and yet for some reason all CDC surveillan­ce reports since 1999 omit the above statement and make no reference to marriage at all. Instead we get, “talk openly about STDs,” and the obligatory, “use condoms.”

If the CDC wants to get serious about STD prevention, it can simply tell the truth: Choosing to reserve all sexual activity for marriage is the safest, healthiest, lifestyle.

Marriage is the only true remedy for the spread of STDs. Those who save sex for marriage and remain faithful eliminate their risk of exposure to STDs. Done.

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SUN- TIMES LIBRARY

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