|
American Foundation for AIDS Research
Issue Brief
Assessing the Efficacy of Abstinence-Only Programs for HIV Prevention Among Young People
April 2005 /amfar/Today, nearly 39 million people around the world are living with HIV/AIDS. At the end of 2003, 10 million young people aged 15-24 were living with HIV/AIDS, and the number continues to grow.1 In the United States, an estimated 850,000-950,000 people are living with HIV/ AIDS, with approximately 40,000 new infections occurring per year. From 2000 to 2003, HIV/AIDS increased by 10 percent among young people in the U.S. aged 15-24.2
These statistics have prompted an expansion of programs aimed at reducing the spread of HIV infection among young people. Among those that are federally funded, the majority are abstinence-only HIV prevention programs.
Growth in ProgramsThe United States government has been supporting abstinence-only programs to prevent teen pregnancy since 1981. Over the years, such programs have grown to include HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted disease (STD) prevention. This trend expanded on an international level with the implementation in 2003 of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which specifically mandates that one-third of all prevention dollars allocated to 15 focus countries through the program must be earmarked for abstinence-only programs.3In the domestic arena alone, funding for key federal abstinence-only programs has increased from $80 million in 2001 to $167 million in 2005 (see Figure 1). Given that abstinence-only education has become the cornerstone of the U.S. government's HIV prevention strategy for young people, it is important to assess the scientific evidence of its efficacy in reducing the risk of HIV/AIDS, especially relative to other HIV prevention strategies, such as comprehensive sex education, for which there are no targeted federal programs or funding streams.4
Defining AbstinenceThere are no uniform or consistent definitions of abstinence-only programs. Currently, two approaches predominate: "abstinence-only" (also called "abstinence-only-until-marriage") and "abstinence-plus" (also called "abstinence-based" or "comprehensive sex education").Abstinence-only programs emphasize refraining from sexual intercourse until marriage as the safest choice to prevent teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted infection. The primary objective of abstinence-only programs is to delay sexual debut (the onset of sexual intercourse) by providing information, changing attitudes about sex, and improving decision-making skills.5-9 Federally funded abstinence-only programs in the U.S. must have as their "exclusive purpose, teaching the social, psychological, and health gains to be realized by abstaining from sexual activity," and must teach "that a mutually faithful monogamous relationship in the context of marriage is the expected standard of human sexual activity" and that "sexual activity outside of the context of marriage is likely to have harmful psychological and physical effects," among other requirements. These programs also are prohibited from discussing contraception or STD prevention technologies, such as condoms, except in reference to their failure rates.10 Under PEPFAR, international programs are expected to "encourage unmarried individuals to abstain from sexual activity as the best and only certain way to protect themselves from exposure to HIV" and other STDs.3
Abstinence-plus programs strongly encourage abstinence among young people but also provide information about contraception and STD risk reduction. In addition to endorsing delay of sexual debut, abstinence-plus programs aim to increase knowledge, behavioral intentions, and use of contraception and disease prevention methods among those who do become sexually active.5-8 Some also discuss variation in human sexuality.
Measuring AbstinenceBoth abstinence-only and abstinence-plus programs measure a range of knowledge, attitudinal, and behavioral outcomes, including knowledge about HIV/AIDS and other STDs, ability to discuss sexual and relationship matters, perceptions of peer activity and norms, age at first intercourse, number of partners, frequency of sexual activity, and condom use.5-9,11However, most abstinence-only and abstinence-plus programs have not been implemented with an experimental design that would allow for rigorous evaluation of their efficacy. Moreover, most have only measured attitudinal, rather than behavioral outcomes. Of those that can be evaluated systematically, the key behavioral outcome assessed is delaying sexual debut, usually by 12 to 18 months.
Summary of the EvidenceResults from systematic reviews (in which the data and outcomes from several studies are analyzed together to obtain an overall finding) are mixed.
Across these reviews, programs were considered generally effective if they reduced one or more behaviors that lead to unintended pregnancy or HIV/STD infection; gave clear messages about sexual activity and contraceptive/condom use; provided accurate basic information about the risks of teen sexual activity; provided activities to address social pressures that influence sexual behavior; modeled and practiced communication, negotiation, and refusal skills; set behavioral goals that were age, culture, and experience specific; and lasted a sufficient length of time.5-8 These reviews conclude that programs are more likely to be effective in delaying sexual debut if they have an explicit theoretical basis, target younger rather than older youth, build youth development skills, and provide abstinence plus risk reduction information, rather than just an abstinence-only message. Other relevant data come from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, a U.S. government-supported survey of more than 20,000 American young people. Researchers examined the difference between young people who took a pledge to remain a virgin until marriage -- perhaps the most explicit statement of behavioral intentions -- and those who did not, and found that:
ConclusionIn summary, the scientific evidence does not support the U.S government's current policy of making abstinence-only-until-marriage programs the cornerstone of its HIV prevention strategy for young people. Nor does it support the rapid scale-up of resources to promote abstinence-only-until-marriage programs in the U.S. and globally. Rather, the scientific evidence to date suggests that investing in comprehensive sex education that includes support for abstinence but also provides risk-reduction information would be a more effective HIV prevention strategy for young people.
References
This article was provided by American Foundation for AIDS Research. |