Bush’s fervour for abstinence programmes led to MORE teenage shagging and STDs

TEENAGE pregnancies and syphilis rose sharply among the generation of American schoolgirls who were urged to avoid sex before marriage under George Bush’s evangelically driven education policy, according to the leading US public health body.abstinence

In a report that will surprise few of Mr Bush’s critics on the issue, the Centres for Disease Control (CDC) says years of falling rates of teenage pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) went into reverse or stalled in the Bush years.

According to the CDC, birth rates among teenagers aged 15 or older had been in decline since 1991 but rose sharply in more than half of American states after 2005. The number of teenage girls with syphilis had risen by nearly half after a big decrease, while a 20-year fall in the gonorrhea infection rate was being reversed. AIDS cases in adolescent boys had nearly doubled.

According to this report, the CDC says southern states tend to have the highest rates of teenage pregnancy and STDs. In addition, about 16,000 pregnancies were reported among girls aged 10-14 in 2004 and a similar number of young people in the age group reported having a sexually transmitted disease.

Said Janet Collins, a CDC director.

It is disheartening that after years of improvement with respect to teen pregnancy and STDs, we now see signs that progress is stalling.

Although the centres do not attribute a cause, groups that support comprehensive sex education have seized on the report as evidence of the failure of religiously driven policies that shy away from teaching about contraception in favour of emphasising avoiding sexual contact.

Planned Parenthood said the report was alarming and that teenagers needed Medically accurate, age-appropriate, comprehensive sex education.

Bush learns that abstinence programmes don't work

Bush learns that abstinence programmes don't work

But supporters of abstinence-based education, such as The Silver Ring Thing, said the report showed there was too little, not too much emphasis on discouragement of sex before marriage.

Meanwhile, we learn from the Independent that Muslim fanatic Yusuf Patel, a member of Hizb ut-Tahrir, an Islamist organisation that Tony Blair considered banning in 2005, has established an organisation to oppose sex education for Muslims in British schools.

As Muslims we believe in values. We believe in haraam and halal, but sex and relationship education (SRE) teaching in this country does not provide this. It is the responsibility of parents to see their children educated, but not at the expense of these values.

Patel’s organisation, SREIslamic, was established eight months ago to encourage Muslims to respond to the Government’s consultation about whether to make SRE compulsory and extend it to five-year-olds. Since then, the organisation claims, it has held 40 workshops across the country and collected tens of thousands of signatures from Muslims opposed to the measures.

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