By Bill Bumpas and Jody Brown The full results of a national
study that favors abstinence education is being withheld from researchers and the public.
The taxpayer-supported
survey from 2008 found that around 70 percent of parents and their teenagers believed that teens should wait until marriage
to have sex. Despite release of the study's summary and its highlight at two major public health conferences last year, the
Department of Health and Human Services is withholding the full results according to Valerie Huber, executive director of
the National Abstinence Education Foundation.
"When a researcher [Dr. Lisa Rue] asked the HHS for the full
results, she [was told it] is not public information and it has not been released to the public and so you don't have access
to it," relates Huber. "[I find that] a little incredulous since it was shared publicly at two different venues."
Huber questions the motivation of the Obama administration, noting that "as of this past fiscal year, President
Obama specifically put in his budget a desire to end all funding for abstinence education."
She hopes a change
will be made soon. "We think that an administration that wants things to be open and clear should certainly do something
different than the decision that is currently being exercised," Huber remarks.
What would the current administration
gain by withholding data favoring teen abstinence?
In a short article about her efforts to obtain a copy of the "National
Survey of Adolescents and Their Parents" (conducted by Abt Associates), Dr. Rue says that having been denied access twice
by the Obama administration "leaves me to reflect on the role of cultural values with regard to prevention science."
The University of Northern Colorado assistant professor continues: "If we are truly interested in learning how
to prevent two critical epidemics currently devastating our country (out-of-wedlock child bearing and sexually transmitted
infections), then the nationally representative findings provide momentum and support for accessing cultural values of parents
and children which promote optimal health choices for adolescents."
Echoing Huber's concern, Rue concludes
with this statement: "...At this point in time, we must ask ourselves: Is this valuable process being suppressed by those
who wish to repress American values in an effort to exert control over sex education offered in the United States?"
Huber is encouraging abstinence supporters to hold the Obama administration accountable by asking for the full report
through a Freedom of Information Act request, which is available at the website for the National Abstinence Education Foundation.
[Bill Bumpas and Jody Brown wrote this report for OneNewsNow.]