Abstinence
Abstinence
Abstinence
Inaccurate.
The Society for Adolescent Medicine recently declared that “abstinence-only programs threaten
fundamental human rights to health, information, and life.”[8,11]
1. Offer age- and culturally appropriate sexual health information in a safe environment for
participants;
2. Are developed in cooperation with members of the target community, especially young people;
3. Assist youth to clarify their individual, family, and community values;
4. Assist youth to develop skills in communication, refusal, and negotiation;
5. Provide medically accurate information about both abstinence and also contraception, including
condoms;
6. Have clear goals for preventing HIV, other STIs, and/or teen pregnancy;
7. Focus on specific health behaviors related to the goals, with clear messages about these
behaviors;
8. Address psychosocial risk and protective factors with activities to change each targeted risk and
to promote each protective factor;
9. Respect community values and respond to community needs;
10. Rely on participatory teaching methods, implemented by trained educators and using all the
activities as designed.[4,5,6,7,10,14