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Family Update, Online!

Volume 03  Issue 21 28 May 2002
Topic: Potpourri

Family Fact: Teen Abstinence?

Family Quote: Praise or Condemnation

Family Research Abstract: Passing Out Pills

Family Fact of the Week: Teen Abstinence? TOP of PAGE

"Is abstinence realistic?  More than 50 percent of high school students have not had sex. And recent studies show this number is increasing. Of teens who are sexually experienced-have had intercourse at least one time-approximately 25 percent are currently abstinent (which means they've had no sexual involvement within the prior three months)."

(Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, (1998), Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance-United States, 1997; Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 47(SS-3), quoted at The Medical Institute for Sexual Health, FAQ, http://www.medinstitute.org/medical/index.htm.)

Family Quote of the Week: Praise or Condemnation TOP of PAGE

There's an old bromide that says, often, the only thing better than your friends' praise, is your enemies' condemnation of you.  -KJS, ed.

"American threats to refuse to sign any declaration [from the United Nations special session on children -ed.] that contained even oblique references to condoms and abortion were the culmination of a two-year campaign by an ultra-right coalition led by religious conservatives; the World Congress of Families (WCF), which includes conservative religious institutions, a raft of antiabortion and abstinence-only groups; and the Heritage Foundation. The WCF has worked hand in glove with the Bush Administration to make the children's summit a target in the war on the condom, (Thompson's, Assistant Secretary for Children and Family, Wade Horn, an ultraconservative who was a key strategist of the US position at the UN children's summit, was the keynote speaker at theWFC's last meeting)."

(Source: Doug Ireland, "US and Evil Axis--Allies for Abstinence", The Nation, May 16, 2002, http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=special&s=ireland20020516.)

For More Information TOP of PAGE

The Howard Center and The World Congress of Families stock a number of pro-family books, including Family Questions: Reflections on the American Social Crisis, by Howard Center president Allan C. Carlson, Ph.D. Please visit:

    The Howard Center Bookstore   

 Call: 1-815-964-5819    USA: 1-800-461-3113    Fax: 1-815-965-1826    Contact: Bookstore 

934 North Main Street Rockford, Illinois 61103

Family Research Abstract of the Week: Passing Out Pills TOP of PAGE

For some time, public health authorities have worried about how excessive use of antibiotics is fostering the emergence of new antibiotic resistant pathogens.  As a consequence, medical authorities are now urging physicians to cut back on their prescriptions for antibiotics.  Unfortunately, if a study recently published in Pediatrics may be taken as any indication, the new efforts to reign in excessive antibiotic use may have only very limited success so long as the day-care center remains a common replacement for in-home parental care. 

Analyzing data from a controlled community-intervention trial in northern Wisconsin, the authors of the new study documented the success of a multifaceted community-based educational intervention in reducing physician prescriptions for both liquid and solid (capsule/tablet) antibiotics.  "The median number of solid antibiotic prescriptions per clinician," report the researchers, "declined 19% in the intervention region and 8% in the control region.  The median number of liquid antibiotic prescriptions per clinician declined 11% in the intervention region, compared with an increase of 12% in the control region."  This would be very good news for health officials-were it not for one glaring exception to this pattern of progress:  "In child care facilities," report the researchers, "there was no apparent impact on judicious antibiotic use."  For all of the progress they see elsewhere, the authors of the new study admit that they were "unable to demonstrate a reduction in inappropriate antibiotic prescribing among children who attended child care." 

In trying to explain "the absence of a reduction in antibiotic use among children in child care," the researchers conjecture that "parents of children who were in child care may have been more likely to expect or demand antibiotics compared with parents of children who were not attending child care."  Parents making demands for antibiotics for children in day care seems especially likely in light of "evidence that child care providers may encourage this behavior." 

Since overuse of antibiotics helps incubate the emergence of antibiotic resistant "supergerms," it is entirely predictable that the authors of the new study trace a statistical link between children's colonization with penicillin-nonsusceptible pneumococci (PNP) and their hours per week in child-care facilities (p < .001).  Unfortunately, these virulent new pathogens also spread beyond the child-care facility.  In speculating as to why the community-wide reduction in the use of antibiotics was "not associated with a measurable decline in PNP prevalence" in the community at large, the researchers implicate the day-care center.  "There was no reduction in the rate of antibiotic prescribing for children in child care," they observe, "so selection pressure for antibiotic resistance may have been maintained in the child care facilities despite community-wide reductions in antibiotic use."  

The authors of the new study call for "further work" on the problem of antibiotic overuse and the consequent spread of antibiotic-resistant disease agents.  Until the day-care centers close and children go home to parental care, that work may yield only meager results. 

(Source: Edward A. Belongia et al., "A Community Intervention Trial to Promote Judicious Antibiotic Use and Reduce Penicillin-Resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae Carriage in Children," Pediatrics 108[2001]: 575-583.)

 

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