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Probe Ministries
The Epidemic of
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Dr. Ray Bohlin
An STD Epidemic
Sexually Transmitted Diseases (or STDs) are at unprecedented and
epidemic proportions. Thirty years of the sexual revolution is
paying an ugly dividend. While a few STDs can be transmitted apart
from sex acts, all are transmissible by the exchange of bodily
fluids during intimate sexual contact. I want to discuss the
severity of the problem as well as what must be done if we are to
save a majority of the next generation from the shame, infertility,
and sometimes death, that may result from STDs.
The information I am about to share is from data gathered by the
Medical Institute for Sexual Health out of Austin, Texas.(1) All of
these statistics are readily available from reputable medical and
scientific journals.
Today, there are approximately 25 STDs. A few can be fatal. Many
women are living in fear of what their future may hold as a result
of STD infection. It is estimated that 1 in 5 Americans between the
ages of 15 and 55 are currently infected with one or more STDs, and
12 million Americans are newly infected each year. That's nearly 5%
of the entire population of the U.S. Of these new infections, 63%
are in people less than 25 years old.
This epidemic is a recent phenomenon. Some young people have
parents who may have had multiple sexual partners with relative
impunity. They may conclude that they too are safe from disease.
However, most of these diseases were not around 20 to 30 years ago.
Prior to 1960, there were only two significant sexually transmitted
diseases: syphilis and gonorrhea. Both were easily treatable with
antibiotics. In the sixties and seventies this relatively stable
situation began to change. For example, in 1976, chlamydia first
appeared in increasing numbers in the United States. Chlamydia,
particularly dangerous to women, is now the most common STD in the
country. Then in 1981, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the
virus which causes AIDS, was identified. By early 1993, between 1
and 2 million Americans were infected with AIDS, over 12 million
were infected worldwide, and over 160,000 had died in the U.S.
alone. Over 10% of the total U.S. population, 30 million people,
are infected with herpes.
In 1985, human papilloma virus (HPV), began to increase. This
virus will result in venereal warts and will often lead to deadly
cancers. In 1990, penicillin resistant-strains of gonorrhea were
present in all fifty states.
By 1992 syphilis was at a 40-year high. As of 1993, pelvic
inflammatory disease (PIV), which is almost always caused by
gonorrhea or chlamydia, was affecting 1 million new women each
year. This includes 16,000 to 20,000 teenagers. This complication
causes pelvic pain and infertility and is the leading cause of
hospitalization for women, apart from pregnancy, during the
childbearing years.
Pelvic inflammatory disease can result in scarred fallopian
tubes which block the passage of a fertilized egg. The fertilized
egg, therefore, cannot pass on to the uterus and the growing embryo
will cause the tube to rupture. By 1990, there was a 400% increase
in tubal pregnancies, most of which were caused by STDs. Even worse
is the fact that 80% of those infected with an STD don't know it
and will unwittingly infect their next sexual partner.
The Medical Facts of STDs
Syphilis is a terrible infection. In its first stage, the
infected individual may be lulled into thinking there is little
wrong since the small sore will disappear in 2 to 8 weeks. The
second and third stages are progressively worse and can eventually
lead to brain, heart, and blood vessel damage if not diagnosed and
treated. The saddest part is that syphilis is 100% curable with
penicillin, yet there is now more syphilis than since the late
1940s, and it is spreading rapidly.
Chlamydia, a disease which only became common in the mid-1970s,
infects 20 to 40% of some sexually active groups including
teenagers. In men, chlamydia is usually less serious; with
females, however, the infection can be devastating. An acute
chlamydia infection in women will result in pain, fever, and damage
to female organs. A silent infection can damage a woman's fallopian
tubes without her ever knowing it. A single chlamydia infection can
result in a 25% chance of infertility. With a second infection, the
chance of infertility rises to 50%. This is double the risk of
gonorrhea.
The human papilloma virus, or HPV, is an extremely common STD.
One study reported that at the University of California, Berkeley,
46% of the sexually active coeds were infected with HPV. Another
study reported that 38% of the sexually active females between the
ages of 13 and 21 were infected. HPV is the major cause of venereal
warts; it can be an extremely difficult problem to treat and may
require expensive procedures such as laser surgery.
The human papilloma virus can result in precancer or cancer of
the genitalia. By causing cancer of the cervix, this virus is
killing more women in this country than AIDS, or over 4,600 women
in 1991. HPV can also result in painful intercourse for years after
infection even though other visible signs of disease have
disappeared.
And of course there is the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV,
the virus that causes AIDS. The first few cases of AIDS were only
discovered in 1981; now, in the U.S. alone, there are between 1 and
2 million infected with this disease. As far as we know, all of
these people will die in the next ten years. As of early 1993,
160,000 had already died.
A 1991 study at the University of Texas at Austin showed that 1
in 100 students who had blood drawn for any reason at the
university health center was HIV infected. While the progress of
the disease is slow for many people, all who have the virus will be
infected for the rest of their life. There is no cure, and many
researchers are beginning to despair of ever coming up with a cure
or even a vaccine (as was eventually done with polio). In 1992, 1
in 75 men was infected with HIV and 1 in 700 women. But the number
of women with AIDS is growing. In the early years of the epidemic
less than 2% of the AIDS cases were women. Now the percentage is
12%.
Teenagers Face a Greater Risk from STDs
Teenagers are particularly susceptible to sexually transmitted
diseases or STDs. This fact is alarming since more teens are
sexually active today than ever before. An entire generation is at
risk and the saddest part about it is that most of them are unaware
of the dangers they face. Our teenagers must be given the correct
information to help them realize that saving themselves sexually
until marriage is the only way to stay healthy.
The medical reasons for teens' high susceptibility to STDs
specifically relates to females. The cervix of a teenage girl has
a lining which produces mucus that is a great growth medium for
viruses and bacteria. As a girl reaches her 20s or has a baby, this
lining is replaced with a tougher, more resistant lining. Also
during the first two years of menstruation, 50% of the periods
occur with-out ovulation. This will produce a more liquid mucus
which also grows bacteria and viruses very well. A 15-year-old girl
has a 1-in-8 chance of developing pelvic inflammatory disease
simply by having sex, whereas a 24-year-old woman has only a 1-
in-80 chance in that situation.
Teenagers do not always respond to antibiotic treatment for
pelvic inflammatory disease, and occasionally such teenage girls
require a hysterectomy. Teenage infertility is also an increasing
problem. In 1965, only 3.6% of the married couples between ages 20
and 24 were infertile; by 1982, that figure had nearly tripled to
10.6%. The infertility rate is surely higher than that now with the
alarming spread of chlamydia.
Teenagers are also more susceptible to human papilloma virus,
HPV. Rates of HPV infection in teenagers can be as high as 40%,
whereas in the adult population, the rate is less than 15%.
Teenagers are also more likely than adults to develop precancerous
growths as a result of HPV infection, and they are more likely to
develop pelvic inflammatory disease.
Apart from the increased risk from STDs in teens, teenage
pregnancy is also at unprecedented levels, over 1 million
pregnancies, and 400,000 abortions in 1985. Abortion is not a
healthy procedure for anyone to undergo, especially a teenager. It
is far better to have not gotten pregnant. Oral contraceptives are
not as effective with teenagers, mainly because teens are more apt
to forget to take the pill. Over a one-year period, as many as 9 to
18% of teenage girls using oral contraceptives become pregnant.
Our teenagers are at great risk. In a society that has abandoned
God's design for healthy meaningful sexual expression within
marriage, our children need to be told the truth about the dangers
of STDs.
Is "Safe Sex" Really the Answer?
I must now take a hard look at the message of "safe sex" which
is being taught to teens at school and through the media across the
country.
Some people believe that if teens can be taught how to use
contraception and condoms effectively, that rates of pregnancy and
STD infection will be reduced dramatically. But the statistics and
common sense tell us otherwise. At Rutgers University, the rates of
infection of students with STD varied little with the form of
contraception used. For example, 35 to 44% of the sexually active
students were infected with one or more STDs whether they used no
contraceptive, oral contraceptive, the diaphragm, or condoms. It is
significant to note that condoms, the hero of the "safe sex"
message, provided virtually no protection from STDs.
Will condoms prevent HIV infection, the virus that causes AIDS?
While it is better than nothing, the bottom line is that condoms
cannot be trusted. A study from Florida looked at couples where one
individual was HIV positive and the other was negative. They used
condoms as protection during intercourse. Obviously these couples
would be highly motivated to use the condoms properly, yet after 18
months, 17% of the previously uninfected partners were now HIV
positive. That is a one-in-six chance, the same as in Russian
roulette. Not good odds!
Condoms do not even provide 100% protection for the purpose for
which they were designed: prevention of pregnancy. One study from
the School of Medicine Family Planning Clinic at the University of
Pennsylvania reported that 25% of patients using condoms as birth
control conceived over a one-year period. Other studies indicate
that the rate of accidental pregnancy from condom-protected
intercourse is around 15% with married couples and 36% for
unmarried couples.
Condoms are inherently untrustworthy. The FDA allows one in 250
to be defective. Condoms are often stored and shipped at unsafe
temperatures which weakens the integrity of the latex rubber
causing breaks and ruptures. Condoms will break 8% of the time and
slip off 7% of the time. There are just so many pitfalls in condom
use that you just can't expect immature teenagers to use them
properly. And even if they do, they are still at risk.
Studies are beginning to show that school-based sex education
that includes condom use as the central message does not work. A
study in a major pediatric journal concluded that "the available
evidence indicates that there is little or no effect from
school-based sex-education on sexual activity, contraception, or
teenage pregnancy."(2) This study evaluated programs that
emphasized condoms. Over $3 billion dollars has been spent on sex-
education programs emphasizing condoms with little or no effect! In
addition, programs that emphasize condoms tend to give a false
sense of security to sexually active students and make those
students who are not having sex feel abnormal. Hardly the desired
result!
The list of damages from unmarried adolescent sexual activity is
long indeed. Apart from the threat to physical health and
fertility, there is damage to family relationships, self-confidence
and emotional health, spiritual health, and future economic
opportunities due to unplanned pregnancy. Condom-based
sex-education does not work.
Saving Sex for Marriage is the Common Sense Solution.
I have been discussing the epidemic of sexually transmitted
diseases that is running rampant in this country and around the
world. Diseases such as chlamydia, human papilloma virus, herpes,
hepatitis B, trichomonas, pelvic inflammatory disease, and AIDS
have joined syphilis and gonorrhea in just the last 30 years. There
is no question that the fruits of the sexual revolution, or sexual
convulsion as one author put it, have been devastating. I have also
shown how our teenagers are at a greater risk for sexually
transmitted diseases than are adults and that sex-education based
on condom use is ineffective and misleading. There is only one
message that offers health, hope, and joy to today's teenagers. We
need to teach single people to save intercourse for marriage.
Sex is a wonderful gift, but if uncontrolled, it has a great
capacity for evil as well as good. Our bodies were not made to have
multiple sex partners. Almost all risk of STD and out of wedlock
pregnancy can be avoided by saving intercourse for marriage. And it
can be done.
Statistics show clearly that in schools that teach a sex
education program that emphasizes saving intercourse for marriage,
the teen pregnancy rate drops dramatically in as little as one
year. In San Marcos, California, a high school used a federally
funded program ("Teen Aid") which emphasizes saving intercourse
until marriage. Before using the program there were 147 pregnancies
out of 600 girls. Within two years, the number of pregnancies
plummeted to 20 out of 600 girls.(3) In Jessup, Georgia, upon
instituting the "Sex Respect" program, the number of pregnancies
out of 340 female students dropped from 17 to 13 to 11 to 3 in
successive years.
Delaying intercourse until teens are older is not a naive
proposal. Over 50% of the females and 40% of the males ages 15 to
19 have not had intercourse. While not a majority, they are living
proof that teens can control their sexual desires. Current
condom-based sex-education programs basically teach teenagers that
they cannot control their sexual desires, and that they must use
condoms to protect themselves. It is not a big leap from teenagers
being unable to control their sexual desires to being unable to
control their hate, greed, anger, and prejudice. This is not the
right message for our teenagers! Teenagers are willing to
discipline themselves for things they want and desire and are
convinced are beneficial. Girls get up early for drill team
practice. Boys train in the off-season with weights to get stronger
for athletic competition. Our teens can also be disciplined in
their sexual lives if they have the right information to make
logical choices. Saving sex for marriage is the common sense
solution. In fact, it is the only solution. We don't hesitate to
tell our kids not to use drugs, and most don't. We tell our kids
it's unhealthy to smoke, and most do not. We tell our kids not to
use marijuana, and most do not.
It is normal and healthy not to have sex until marriage.
Sexually transmitted diseases are so common that it is not an
exaggeration to say that most people who regularly have sex outside
of marriage will contract a sexually transmitted disease. Not only
is saving sex for marriage the only real hope for sexual health, it
is God's design. God has said that our sexuality is to blossom
within the confines of a mutually faithful monogamous relationship.
What we are seeing today is the natural consequence of
disobedience. We need to reeducate our kids not just in what is
best, but in what is right.
Notes
1. Medical Institute for Sexual Health, P.O. Box 4919, Austin,
TX 78765.
2. I.W. Stout, et al., Pediatrics, 1989, 83:376-79.
3. Joe S. McIlhaney, Jr., Safe Sex (Grand Rapids,
Michigan; Baker Book House, 1991), p. 86.
© 1993 Probe Ministries International
About the Author
Raymond G. Bohlin is executive director of Probe Ministries.
He is a graduate of the University of Illinois (B.S., zoology),
North Texas State University (M.S., population genetics), and the
University of Texas at Dallas (M.S., Ph.D., molecular biology). He
is the co-author of the book The Natural Limits to Biological
Change, served as general editor of Creation, Evolution and Modern
Science, and has published numerous journal articles. Dr. Bohlin
was named a 1997-98 and 2000 Research Fellow of the Discovery
Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture. He can
be reached via e-mail at rbohlin@probe.org.
What is Probe?
Probe Ministries is a non-profit corporation whose mission is to reclaim the
primacy of Christian thought and values in Western culture through media,
education, and literature. In seeking to accomplish this mission, Probe provides
perspective on the integration of the academic disciplines and historic
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In addition, Probe acts as a clearing house, communicating the results of
its research to the church and society at large.
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Updated: 14 July 2002
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