800px-postpartum_baby2 Religion and Teen Pregnancy - Perfect Together?

Where in the United States are teen-age girls most likely to become pregnant? According to this study, published last month in the journal Reproductive Health, the answer is: Where Evangelical Christians are most numerous.

The debate over whether abstinence education ``works'' has been running for a while now. This study acknowledges that different researchers have reached different conclusions, but it argues that the answer is: Nope, no way, nuh-huh.

The researchers, Joseph M. and Jillian C. Strayhorn, write that they found a direct link between religiosity and teen pregnancy, which is not an incidental byproduct of income differences or attitudes toward abortion. The aptonymically-named Strayhorns believe the explanation could be that religiously-raise teen girls aren't given much sex education, and that early-life motherhood is not stigmatized in religious households the way it is in secular homes that put more emphasis on individual autonomy and self-expression.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Share This Story

About Mind Matters

303 Posts since 2009

In markets, medicine, justice, politics, psychology, and economics, "Rational Man" is dead. As the science of human behavior enters the post-rational era, we no longer think of ourselves as cool calculators in pursuit of our objective self-interest. Mind Matters is about this change and its effects on how we live. It's about the reasons people perceive, feel, think, and act as they do, and the gaps between what we think we're doing and what research says we're doing. Most importantly, it's about how this sea change affects the institutions we live by: courts, hospitals, governments, stock markets and other entities that still run on the presumption that people act rationally.

Links

Recent Posts