Order Code RS20873
Updated February 17, 2005
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Reducing Teen Pregnancy:
Adolescent Family Life and
Abstinence Education Programs
Carmen Solomon-Fears
Domestic Social Policy Division
Summary
In 2003, 47% of students in grades 9-12 reported that they had experienced sexual
intercourse; about 20% of female teens who have had sexual intercourse become
pregnant each year. In recognition of the often negative, long-term consequences
associated with teenage pregnancy, Congress has provided funding for the prevention
of teenage and out-of-wedlock pregnancies. This report discusses two programs that
exclusively attempt to reduce teenage pregnancy. The Adolescent Family Life (AFL)
demonstration program was enacted in 1981 as Title XX of the Public Health Service
Act, and the Abstinence Education program was enacted in 1996 as part of the welfare
reform legislation. This report will be updated as new information becomes available.
Introduction
Since 1991, teen pregnancy, abortion, and birth rates have all fallen considerably.
In 2000 (latest available data), the overall pregnancy rate for teenagers was 83.6 per 1,000
females aged 15-19, down 27% from the 1991 level of 115.3. The 2000 teen pregnancy
rate is the lowest recorded since 1973, when this series was initiated.1 However, it still
is higher than the teen pregnancy rates of most industrialized nations. According to a
recent report on children and youth, in 2003, 33% of ninth graders reported that they had
experienced sexual intercourse. The corresponding statistics for older teens were: 44%
for tenth graders, 53% for eleventh graders, and 62% for twelfth graders.2 About 20% of
female teens who have had sexual intercourse become pregnant each year.
For many years, there have been divergent views with regard to sex and young
people. Many argue that sexual activity in and of itself is wrong if the persons are not
1 The Alan Guttmacher Institute, U.S. Teenage Pregnancy Statistics: Overall Trends, Trends by
Race and Ethnicity and State-by-State Information
, updated Feb. 19, 2004, p. 7.
2 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, MMWR, vol. 53, no. SS-2, Youth Risk Behavior
Surveillance:United States, 2003,
May 21, 2004, at [http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/
SS/SS5302.pdf].
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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married. Others agree that it is better for teenagers to abstain from sex but are primarily
concerned about the negative consequences of sexual activity, namely unintended
pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). These two viewpoints are reflected
in two pregnancy prevention approaches. The Adolescent Family Life (AFL) program
encompasses both views and provides funding for both prevention programs and
programs that provide medical and social services to pregnant or parenting teens. The
Abstinence Education program centers on the abstinence-only message and only funds
programs that adhere solely to bolstering that message. (For information on Title X,
which serves a much broader clientele than teens and pre-teens, see CRS Report 97-1048,
The Title X Family Planning Program.)
The Adolescent Family Life Program
The AFL demonstration program was enacted in 1981 as Title XX of the Public
Health Service Act (P.L. 97-35). It is administered by the Office of Adolescent Pregnancy
Programs, Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). From 1981 until 1996, the
AFL program was the only federal program that focused directly on the issues of
adolescent sexuality, pregnancy, and parenting.3
Program Purpose. The AFL program was designed to promote — family
involvement in the delivery of services, adolescent premarital sexual abstinence, adoption
as an alternative to early parenting, parenting and child development education, and
comprehensive health, education, and social services geared to help the mother have a
healthy baby and improve subsequent life prospects for both mother and child.
Allowable Projects. The AFL program authorizes grants for three types of
demonstrations: (1) projects provide “care” services only (i.e., health, education, and
social services to pregnant adolescents, adolescent parents, their infant, families, and male
partners); (2) projects which provide “prevention” services only (i.e., services to promote
abstinence from premarital sexual relations for pre-teens, teens, and their families); and
(3) projects which provide a combination of care and prevention services. Any public or
private nonprofit organization or agency is eligible to apply for a demonstration grant.
AFL projects can be funded for up to five years. Currently, the AFL program is
supporting 107 demonstration projects across the country. (Source:
[http://opa.osophs.dhhs.gov/titlexx/oapp.html].)
AFL care projects are required to provide comprehensive health, education, and
social services (including life and career planning, job training, safe housing, decision-
making and social skills), either directly or through partnerships with other community
agencies, and to evaluate new approaches for implementing these services. AFL care
projects are based within a variety of settings such as universities, hospitals, schools,
public health departments, or community agencies. Many provide home visiting services
3 The predecessor of the AFL program was the Adolescent Pregnancy program, which was
enacted in 1978 (P.L. 95-626). The Adolescent Pregnancy program was designed to alleviate the
negative consequences of pregnancy for the adolescent parent and her child (i.e., the care
component of the AFL program). The Adolescent Pregnancy program was consolidated into the
Maternal and Child Health Block Grant when the AFL program was enacted.

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and all have partnerships with diverse community agencies. Currently, 45 care projects
are being funded; eight of the projects started in FY2002.
Since 1997, all AFL prevention projects that have been funded have been abstinence-
only projects that were required to conform to the definition of abstinence education as
defined in P.L. 104-193. Most of these projects try to reach students between the ages of
9 to 14 in public schools, community settings or family households; all involve significant
interaction with parents to strengthen the abstinence message. Currently, 62 abstinence-
only projects are being funded; 38 of the projects started in FY2002, six started in
FY2003.
Evaluations and Research. Each demonstration project is required to include
an internal evaluation component designed to test hypotheses specific to that project’s
service delivery model. The grantee contracts with an independent evaluator, usually one
affiliated with a college or university in the grantee’s state. The AFL program also
authorizes funding of research grants dealing with various aspects of adolescent sexuality,
pregnancy, and parenting. Research projects have examined factors that influence teenage
sexual, contraceptive and fertility behaviors, the nature and effectiveness of care services
for pregnant and parenting teens and why adoption is a little-used alternative among
pregnant teenagers. Since 1982, the AFL program has funded 68 research projects.
Adolescent Family Life Program (appropriations in millions of dollars)
Fiscal year
Appropriation
Fiscal year
Appropriation
Fiscal year
Appropriation
1982
$11.080
1990
$9.421
1998
$16.709
1983
13.518
1991
7.789
1999
17.700
1984
14.918
1992
7.789
2000
19.327
1985
14.716
1993
7.598
2001
24.377
1986
14.689
1994
6.250
2002
28.900
1987
14.000
1995
6.698
2003
30.922
1988
9.626
1996
7.698
2004
30.720
1989
9.529
1997
14.209
2005
31.229
Abstinence Education
1996 Welfare Reform. P.L. 104-193, the 1996 welfare reform law, provides $250
million in federal funds specifically for the abstinence education program ($50 million per
year for five years, FY1998-FY2002). Funds must be requested by states when they
solicit Title V Maternal and Child Health (MCH) block grant funds and must be used
exclusively for teaching abstinence. To receive federal funds, a state must match every
$4 in federal funds with $3 in state funds.4 This means that funding for abstinence
education must total at least $87.5 million annually. Although the Title V abstinence-only
education block grant has not yet been reauthorized, several extension bills have
4 States use a variety of methods to meet the federal matching requirement, such as state funds,
private or foundation funds, matching funds from community-based grantees, and in-kind
services (e.g., volunteer staffing, public service announcements, etc.).

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continued funding for the grant. The latest extension, P.L. 108-308 (H.R. 5149),
continues funding for the Title V abstinence-only block grant through March 31, 2005.5
P.L. 105-33, enacted in 1997, included funding for a scientific evaluation of the
abstinence education programs; P.L. 106-554 required an interim report. Mathematica
Policy Research won the contract for the evaluation. (See The Evaluation of Abstinence
Education Programs Funded Under Title V Section 510: Interim Report
[http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/abstinence02/index.htm].) The final report is due in 2005.
To ensure that the abstinence-only message is not diluted, the law (P.L. 104-193,
Section 510 of the Social Security Act) stipulated that the term “abstinence education”
means an educational or motivational program that — (1) has as its exclusive purpose,
teaching the social, psychological, and health gains of abstaining from sexual activity; (2)
teaches abstinence from sexual activity outside of marriage as the expected standard for
all school-age children; (3) teaches that abstinence is the only certain way to avoid
out-of-wedlock pregnancy, STDs, and associated health problems; (4) teaches that a
mutually faithful monogamous relationship within marriage is the expected standard of
human sexual activity; (5) teaches that sexual activity outside of marriage is likely to have
harmful psychological and physical effects; (6) teaches that bearing children
out-of-wedlock is likely to have harmful consequences for the child, the child’s parents,
and society; (7) teaches young people how to reject sexual advances and how alcohol and
drug use increases vulnerability to sexual advances; and (8) teaches the importance of
attaining self-sufficiency before engaging in sex.
What Is Abstinence?
It is becoming clear that parents, teachers, and teenagers are not in agreement on what constitutes
abstinence. Teens are more likely than adults to believe that behaviors that cannot result in pregnancy
constitute abstinence. Because pregnancy prevention together with avoidance of STDs are dual goals
of the abstinence education program, some observers contend that it is time for programs to explicitly
define what constitutes sexual activity. Others contend that specifying behaviors other than sexual
intercourse violates a child’s innocence and may provide ideas for experimentation.
Source: Lisa Remez, “Oral Sex among Adolescents: Is It Sex or Is It Abstinence?” Family Planning
Perspectives (
Alan Guttmacher Institute), 32(6), Nov-Dec. 2000, pp. 298-304.
In FY2004, every state except California and Pennsylvania (and several territories)
sponsored an abstinence education program. These programs launch media campaigns
to influence attitudes and behavior, develop abstinence education curricula, revamp sexual
education classes, and implement other activities focused on abstinence education. State
funding is based on the proportion of low-income children in the state as compared to the
national total. In FY2004, federal abstinence education funding ranged from $68,059 in
Vermont to $4,880,089 in Texas.
Appropriations for 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005. P.L. 106-246
appropriated an additional $20 million for FY2001 to HHS under the Special Projects of
Regional and National Significance (SPRANS) program (funded by the MCH Block
5 H.R. 4, the welfare reform reauthorization bill, which was passed by the House on Feb. 13, 2003
and approved, with amendments, by the Senate Finance Committee on Sept. 10, 2003, would
have extended funding for the $50 million abstinence-only block grant through FY2008.
Although H.R. 4 was debated on the Senate floor during the period Mar. 29-Apr. 1, 2004,
consideration of the bill was not completed during the 108th Congress.

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grant) for abstinence education to bolster the abstinence-only message for adolescents
aged 12 through 18. P.L. 106-554 also reinforced the abstinence education program by
providing an additional $30 million for FY2002 for continued funding for abstinence-only
education under the SPRANS program. P.L. 107-116 increased the SPRANS abstinence
program funding from $30 million to $40 million for FY2002. P.L. 108-7 increased
funding for the SPRANS program to $55 million for FY2003. P.L. 108-199 increased
funding for the SPRANS program to $70.0 million for FY2004. P.L. 108-447 increased
funding for the SPRANS abstinence education program to $100 million for FY2005.
Issues
Comparable Funding for Abstinence Education. President Bush has
indicated his support for abstinence education. As governor of Texas, he stated: “For
children to realize their dreams, they must learn the value of abstinence. We must send
them the message that of the many decisions they will make in their lives, choosing to
avoid early sex is one of the most important. We must stress that abstinence isn’t just
about saying no to sex; it’s about saying yes to a happier, healthier future.”6 The proposal
he supported during his presidential campaign would provide at least as much funding for
abstinence education as is provided for teen contraception services under the Medicaid,
family planning (Title X), and AFL programs, namely about $135 million annually.7
Perhaps as many as 27 other federal programs include a teen contraception component,
but expenditures solely for this component could not be isolated.8 For FY2005, the
funding for abstinence education totals $186 million: $50 million for the abstinence-only
block grant; $31 million for the AFL prevention projects, $100 million for the SPRANS
abstinence-only education program (up to $10 million of which may be used for a national
abstinence education campaign), and $4.5 million for an evaluation of the program.9
Abstinence-Only Versus Comprehensive Sexuality Education. According
to a 1997 Alan Guttmacher Institute survey, among the 69% of public school districts that
have a district-wide policy to teach sex education, 14% have a comprehensive policy that
treats abstinence as one option for adolescents in a broader sexuality education program;
6 Campaign literature from georgebush.com, accessed by author on Nov. 22, 2000.
7 Some family planning experts caution that the spending data may be misleading because it
includes much more than contraception services. They contend that family planning programs
include a vast array of medical services beyond the prescription of a contraceptive method,
including pap smears, breast exams, screening for STDs, and one-on-one counseling of teens.
8 The MCH and Title XX social services block grants are among the HHS programs that provide
contraceptive services to teens (GAO/HEHS-99-4, Teen Pregnancy: State and Federal Efforts
to Implement Prevention Programs and Measure Their Effectiveness
, Nov. 1998). In addition,
one of the four purposes of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant
is to prevent out-of-wedlock pregnancies. Thus, TANF funds can also be used for a variety of
programs to achieve this goal/purpose.
9 Funding for abstinence education amounted to $79 million in FY2001, $100 million in FY2002,
$115 million in FY2003, and $135 million in FY2004. President Bush’s proposed FY2006
budget would bring funding for abstinence-only education programs to $206 million in FY2006.
It includes a continuation of the $50 million block grant, $13.120 million for the AFL program,
$142.545 million for the SPRANS abstinence-only education program (including $4.5 million
for an evaluation and $10 million for a national abstinence education campaign).

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51% teach abstinence as the preferred option for teenagers, but also permit discussion
about contraception as an effective means of protecting against unintended pregnancy and
disease (an abstinence-plus policy); and 35% teach abstinence as the only option outside
of marriage, with discussion of contraception prohibited entirely or permitted only to
emphasize its shortcomings (abstinence-only policy).10
Advocates of the abstinence education approach argue that teenagers need to hear
a single, unambiguous message that sex outside of marriage is wrong and harmful to their
physical and emotional health. They contend that youth can and should be empowered
to say no to sex. They argue that supporting both abstinence and birth control is
hypocritical and undermines the strength of an abstinence-only message. They also
mention recent research that indicates that teens who take virginity pledges to refrain from
sex until marriage appear to delay having sex longer than those teens who do not make
such a commitment. (The study found that teens who publicly promise to postpone sex
until marriage refrain from intercourse for about a year and a half longer than teens who
didn’t make such a pledge.)11 They argue that abstinence is the most effective means of
preventing unwanted pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases (including HIV/AIDS).
Advocates of the more comprehensive approach to sex education argue that today’s
youth need information and decision-making skills to make realistic, practical decisions
about whether to engage in sexual activities. They contend that such an approach allows
young people to make informed decisions regarding abstinence, gives them the
information they need to set relationship limits and to resist peer pressure, and also
provides them with information on the use of contraceptives and the prevention of
sexually transmitted diseases. They note that abstinence-only messages provide no
protection against the risks of pregnancy and disease for those who are sexually active.
They point out that teens who break their virginity pledges were less likely to use
contraception the first time than teens who had never made such a promise.
Although there is much research and many evaluations on both abstinence-only
programs and comprehensive sexuality education programs, there is no consensus on the
effectiveness of these approaches. According to a 1997 report on research findings:
At least four factors limit the conclusions that can be drawn from the many studies
reviewed. First, the studies conducted to date are simply too few to evaluate each of
the different approaches, let alone the various combinations of approaches. Second,
many of these studies are limited by methodological problems or constraints. Third,
these studies have often produced inconsistent results. And, fourth, there are very few
replications of even the most promising programs that assess their impact in other
types of communities and with other groups of youths.12
10 David J. Landry, Lisa Kaeser, and Cory L. Richards, “Abstinence Promotion and the Provision of
Information about Contraception in Public School Districts Sexuality Education Policies,” Family
Planning Perspectives
(Alan Guttmacher Institute), 31(6), Nov.-Dec. 1999, pp. 280-286.
11 Peter S. Bearman and Hannah Bruckner, “Promising the Future: Virginity Pledges as They
Affect the Transition to First Intercourse,” American Journal of Sociology, Jan. 2001.
12 Douglas Kirby, Emerging Answers: Research Findings on Programs to Reduce Teen
Pregnancy
, May 2001, Commissioned by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy.