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Virginity Pledges Don’t Change
Sexual Behavior
By Psych Central News Editor
While teenagers’ pledges to remain
a virgin until marriage may make them feel good about their
sexuality choices, it apparently does little in actually changing
their sexual behavior. A new study just published suggests that such
premarital abstinence pledges are simply ineffective. The analysis
from researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health looked at data gathered from a nationwide survey of 11,000
teens, the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health.
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The study
found more than half of youths surveyed engaged in sexual
activity, regardless of whether they had made a pledge to
remain sexually abstinent.
Researchers also discovered
something not entirely unexpected — virginity pledgers were
10 percent less likely to use a form of birth control.
Virginity pledges are often tied to a person’s religious
beliefs, which may also teach against using birth control.
The researchers focused on
934 high school students from about 3,400 students who had
never had sex or had taken a virginity pledge in 1995.
Investigators compared students who had |
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taken a virginity pledge
with those who hadn’t.
After five years, those
who had taken a pledge did not differ from teens who
hadn’t taken a pledge in rates of premarital sex, oral
or anal sex, or sexually transmitted diseases.
The study also found
that, after 5 years, more than 80 percent of virginity
pledgers had retracted their promises.
The findings suggest
that “virginity pledges” do little to deter teenage
sexuality. It also suggests that people who take such
pledges are at a slightly increased risk for pregnancy
or sexually transmitted diseases when they do have sex,
due to their decreased use of condoms or other birth
control. |
The findings were published in the
January issue of the journal Pediatrics. -- Courtesy
of Psychcentral.com
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