New
Mexico Shuns Abstinence Only Program
New Mexico
schools have shuned an abstinence-only group after saying that
the demand for their presentations at Albuquerque public schools
has plummeted after media reports and school officials questioned
whether the group's lessons are medically accurate. Officials
with the Best Choice Educational Services, which conducts the
abstinence-only classes, say local schools have been "confused"
by the scrutiny of its program, which they insist contains medically
accurate data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
But Albuquerque
school board member Miguel Acosta and some public-health officials
in the city have said the program provides false information about
condoms' effectiveness in protecting against sexually transmitted
diseases. Most of the 25 Albuquerque public schools that invited
BCES to conduct abstinence-only sessions last year have not asked
the agency to return this year, says BCES peer mentoring director
Mandi Dotson. BCES executive director David Magruder says the
falling demand for the program could threaten its funding. With
fewer students attending BCES's abstinence-only classes--about
3,400 have participated in the classes so far this year, down
from about 5,000 students at the same point in 2004--the group
may lose out on some of the $75,000 in state funds and $536,000
in federal grants it receives each year.