
Adolescent
Reproductive Health Conference
April 16-17, 2004
Click
here to read the conference report >>
Youth Reproductive Health in a Controversial Climate:
Reclaiming Strategies that Work
The Pacific Institute
for Women's Health, UCLA's Bixby Program in Population
and Reproductive Health, and WYSE (Women Supporting
Youth and Each Other) co- sponsored the conference,
entitled "Youth Reproductive Health in a Controversial
Climate: Reclaiming Strategies that Work." Approximately
150 advocates, researchers, community leaders and young
people attended the sessions, held at the University
of Southern California on April 16-17.
"There is a big disconnect
between public opinion and conservative politics," declared
conference speaker Sharon Camp, Ph.D., President and
CEO of the Alan Guttmacher Institute. "U.S. public policy
on sexuality education ignores both public opinion and
research on 'what works.'" While 81 percent of parents
and sex ed teachers support comprehensive sex ed over
abstinence-only programs, 86 percent of federally- funded
programs require that abstinence be emphasized. Only
14 percent of federal sex ed funds go to programs that
combine abstinence messages with other information,
such as contraceptives and condom use to prevent sexually-transmitted
infections and HIV.
Presenter Douglas Kirby,
Ph.D., Senior Research Scientist at ETR Associates and
one of the country's leading investigators of sexual
and reproductive health, argued "we cannot yet point
to any single abstinence- only program and say it is
effective in delaying sex among young people." Not one
evaluation has yet been completed for any federally-funded
abstinence- only sex ed program. Bill Smith, Director
of Public Policy for SEICUS, declared "science has been
attacked, distorted and trumped by the evidence-be-damned
attitude of the current Administration."
In California, critical
sexual and reproductive health programs for adolescents
are currently on the chopping block in Governor Schwarzenegger's
budget. Programs to reduce the rates of unintended pregnancy,
teen pregnancy, and sexually-transmitted infections--such
as Community Challenge Grants; Family Planning, Access,
Care and Treatment (Family PACT); Male Involvement Program;
and the Teen SMART Program-- all face cuts in the coming
months.
Cutting costs today,
however, will ultimately cost California taxpayers additional
millions down the road. According to Jenny Oropeza,
Assemblymember from the 54th District, every dollar
spent on publicly subsidized family planning services
saves $4.40 on costs that would otherwise be spent on
medical care, welfare benefits, and other social services
to women- particularly teens-who become pregnant.
Although teen birth rates
in California fell 40 percent between 1991 and 2001,
the state is in the midst of what experts call a "youth
quake." The number of adolescents aged 10-19 in California
is expected to skyrocket 34 percent in the decade from
1995-2005 (compared to an overall U.S. increase of 13
percent). As a result, a new study entitled, "No Time
for Complacency: Teen Births in California" projects
a reversal of the recent decline in teen births. According
to the report, teen births are projected to increase
by 21 percent between 2001 and 2006, due to population
growth alone. One out of every seven adolescents in
the United States now lives in California.
According to Claire Brindis,
Dr. P.H., and Director of the Center for Reproductive
Health Research and Policy at the University of California-San
Francisco, California invested $128 million in teen
pregnancy prevention education and health services in
FY 1998-99. Yet this relatively modest investment had
a dramatic impact: taxpayers saved $968 million by averting
costs related to teen births, and society saved $2.2
billion by averting related social costs. While the
vast majority of parents support publicly funded reproductive
health education, potential reductions in prevention
education programs-at both the state and federal levels-will
likely increase the numbers of teen births.
Click
here to read the letter to President Bush drafted by
conference participants >>

Organizers
of the conference with a keynote speakers (L to R):
Lissette
Flores (Bixby), Ana Rodriquez (PIWH), Muadi Mukenge
(PIWH), Susana Caceres (WYSE), U.S. Congresswoman Diane
Watson, Paula Tavrow (Bixby), Innocentia Riker (PIWH),
Jacqueline Guzman (PIWH), and Taraneh Salke (Bixby).
Missing: Magaly Marques (PIWH).
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