By
Linda Chavez
Bristol Palin is back in the news. The
Alaska
governor's daughter became the most famous unwed pregnant
teenager in America last
summer when her mother was nominated to be the GOP's vice
presidential candidate. Since then,
Bristol
has given birth to a boy in December and the engagement to the
baby's father has ended. This week she took center stage again
for promoting abstinence among teenagers as part of Teen
Pregnancy Awareness Day — but she's been greeted with howls of
derision from pundits and others who think her actions are
hypocritical. But before critics jump on
Bristol, maybe they should consider the
facts.
The majority of teenagers who have had
sex regret their decision — and that's not just those who get
pregnant. We need to worry about increasing rates of teen
pregnancy, which fell steadily between 1991 and 2005, but
started moving up again in 2006 and are higher in the U.S. than in all other countries in
the industrialized world. But pregnancy isn't the only issue
that should concern us when teenagers are sexually active,
especially young teens, even if they use contraception. Most
young teens are not emotionally ready to have sex, even if their
hormones are telling them differently.
The National Campaign to Prevent Teen
and Unplanned Pregnancy has been the leader in providing hard,
empirical data on what works to prevent teen pregnancy and in
studying attitudes among young people on the issue. (I currently
serve on the board of the National Campaign, which includes a
broad range of public figures, health specialists, and academics
whose views cut across a wide political spectrum.) In 2007, the
National Campaign published a comprehensive survey on attitudes
toward sexual activity, teen pregnancy, and who and what most
affected teens' likelihood of engaging in sex. "With One Voice: America's Teens
and Adults Sound Off about Teen Pregnancy" includes some
surprising findings.
Among teenagers who have already had
sex, 60 percent said they wish they had waited. And 90 percent
of teens say they believe that providing young people with a
strong abstinence message is important, a figure not much
different from the 93 percent of adults who favor a
pro-abstinence message. Teens also credit parents with being the
most important influence in their lives on their decisions to
have sex or to delay sexual activity. Nearly half (47 percent)
credit their parents with influencing their decisions, more than
friends (18 percent), religious leaders (7 percent), siblings (5
percent), teachers or sex educators (4 percent), or the media (3
percent). These figures have remained consistent in all the
National Campaign's surveys.
According to the findings in this
survey, which included a representative sample of more than
2,000 teens and adults interviewed by phone, both adults and
teens believe it is important to discourage teenagers from
sexual activity at least until they are out of high school.
Eight out of 10 adults said such messages were very important,
as did two-thirds of teenagers. But a majority of adults and
teens also want information about contraception given to
teenagers. However, nearly half of teens (46 percent) surveyed
acknowledged that telling teens "don't have sex but if you do,
you should use birth control or protection" actually encourages
teens to have sex.
Given these findings, Bristol Palin's
advocacy for teen abstinence is a good thing. She's a
high-profile example of why all the best-laid plans sometimes go
awry. Bristol
got pregnant even though she and her former boyfriend admitted
they usually used contraception. She may have thought she would
marry the father of her baby, but they ended up breaking up
after the baby was born. And now instead of being a college
freshman enjoying an active social life, she's home taking care
of her infant son.
At least
Bristol
has a support network to help her raise her child — many unwed
teen moms don't. If she can discourage even a few young girls
from following in her footsteps, I think she deserves our
praise, not the snickers she's been getting from some quarters.
-
______________________________________________________
Linda Chavez is President of the Center for Equal
Opportunity. Her latest book is "Betrayal: How Union Bosses
Shake Down Their Members and Corrupt American Politics".
- May 8, 2009 article at:
-
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/chavez050809.php3