Obstinacy and Abstinence

In the faith-infused world of George W. Bush and his conservative flock, what you know is consistently trumped by what you believe. Empirical science is relegated to the back of the bus. In this world (around which the sun no doubt revolves), global warming is dismissed as absurd, the theory of evolution is only a theory, and abstinence makes the heart grow fonder. While it is understandable that those who have been “saved” believe that young people should save themselves for (heterosexual only) marriage, the evidence to support abstinence-only educational programs is wanting. Indeed, as reported by Reuters, the Bush administration isn’t even bothering to obtain such evidence, simply preferring to fund the programs that fit with their distorted beliefs:

Government censured on family planning policies

A congressional report has criticized the Bush administration for failing to check if federally funded abstinence-only programs actually work to curb teen sex.

Advocacy groups joined the criticism, and also attacked the appointment of a top family planning official who they say opposes any use of contraceptives.

The advocates said both developments showed the government of President George W. Bush was determined to impose a deeply conservative Christian agenda onto federal programs.

The Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, said the Health and Human Services Department was funding controversial abstinence-only programs without checking to see whether they reduced teen pregnancy rates.

The GAO report focused on three abstinence programs that received $158 million in federal funding last year.

“Efforts by HHS and states to assess the scientific accuracy of materials used in abstinence-until-marriage education programs have been limited,” the GAO report reads.

Several studies have suggested that abstinence-only education does not reduce teen pregnancy rates. And the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finds high rates of teen sex even after several years of government-funded abstinence education programs. [full text]