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A recently study [http://www.lifenews.com/nat6463.html] published in the American Journal of Public Health [online 17 June 2010] found that 14 percent of women who had abortions reported having experienced physical or sexual abuse at least once in the past year.

The survey of 986 women found that 10 percent reported physical abuse and 3 percent reported sexual abuse, with 74 percent of women reporting they were abused by a current partner and 24 percent reporting abuse by a previous partner (some women reported abuse by both current and former partners).

While the study only asked about the year prior to the abortion, many post- abortion counselors have found that many women who have had abortions report a history of sexual abuse,  perhaps in their childhood. Most discussion about abortion and sexual abuse concerns what happens if a woman or girl becomes pregnant as a result of rape or incest.

The book Forbidden Grief: The Unspoken Pain of Abortion  (http://www.theunchoice.com/forbiddengrief.htm) explores the further connection between abortion and a history of sexual abuse that may have occurred before the pregnancy took place.

Audrey Saftlas, Universiy of Iowa professor of epidemiology and lead author of the study, commented: "Women seeking termination of pregnancy comprise a particularly high-risk group for physical or sexual assault. In our study, almost 14 percent of women receiving an abortion reported at least one incident of physical or sexual abuse in the past year."

"These findings strongly support the need for clinic-based screening with interventions. These high-risk women need resources, referrals and support to help them and their families reduce the violence in their lives," Saftlas added.

 
Study Confirms the Risks of Premarital Sexual Activity (1/05) PDF Print E-mail

Researchers at Ohio State University have affirmed what abstinence educators have long been saying: premarital sexual activity, even when limited, is extremely dangerous and carries extraordinary risks.

The study, which tracked the sexual activity of an entire high school over 18 months, showed that more than half of those students who were sexually active were linked to 288 partners.

 

To determine how teenage sexual activity is webbed, researchers interviewed more than 80 percent of the students at a public high school in the Midwest. By linking current sexual partners with previous sexual partners, researchers found that more than 50 percent of the student body was linked in the same pool of sexual activity.

This new study published in the American Journal of Sociology is not news to abstinence educators and underscores the need for abstinence education.

“Teens need to know the truth,” said Leslee J. Unruh, president of the Abstinence Clearinghouse. “They need to understand the dangerous realities of being sexually active before marriage. With STD rates skyrocketing among youth, educators need to stop promoting the lie that sex can be “casual” and that it can be free from consequences.”

Besides teaching that only abstinence until marriage provides 100 percent protection against premarital pregnancy and STDs, abstinence education teaches teens the importance of saving sex for marriage. In fact, sharing the concept of sexual exposure is an important component in many abstinence education curricula.

“The time has come to stop playing Russian roulette with our children’s futures. Contraception promoters have taught them that premarital sex can be risk-free when it simply can not,” said Unruh. “Abstinence educators will not give up fighting for kids until the message of abstinence until marriage is heard by every adolescent.”

For more information on abstinence until marriage education, contact the Abstinence Clearinghouse at (605) 335-3643 or visit us on the web at www.abstinence.net. [American Journal of Sociology, Abstinence Clearinghouse Press Release, 01/26/05]

 
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