[Dialogue] Will Future Doctors Be Forced to Teach Abstinence?
Harry Wainwright
h-wainwright at charter.net
Fri Jul 21 12:00:26 EST 2006
AlterNet
Will Future Doctors Be Forced to Teach Abstinence?
By Myra Batchelder, Choice! Magazine
Posted on July 20, 2006, Printed on July 21, 2006
http://www.alternet.org/story/39285/
In April, the Medical Institute for Sexual Health (MISH)
<http://www.medinstitute.org/> made headlines after the federal government
announced that the group would receive a $200,000 grant to establish a
sexual health curriculum for medical students. Sexual health experts
affiliated with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
were taken aback.
Why the outrage? Despite what its legitimate-sounding name might suggest,
MISH is really nothing more than a thinly veiled ideological interest group
that manipulates science to advance its mission.
The History of MISH
Dr.
<http://www.medinstitute.org/about_us/index.html?PHPSESSID=97c299dbafa32b29b
bbd70424817865b> Joe McIlhaney, an evangelical ob/gyn, founded MISH in
Texas in 1992. According to the organization's website, after "witnessing
first-hand the full effects of the sexual revolution," McIlhaney was "moved
to dedicate the next chapter of his life to the prevention of these problems
rather than continuing to only treat the effects." With initial funding from
James Leininger, a prominent San Antonio business executive who has been
called the "sugar daddy" of the far-right in Texas, MISH was born.
MISH is best known for the abstinence-only materials it provides to youth
organizations and educators that rely largely on scare tactics. The group
states that "behavior choices for optimum health are sexual abstinence for
unmarried individuals and faithfulness within marriage." Translation:
abstinence is the only acceptable method for unmarried couples to prevent
pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
MISH has come a long way since its founding in 1992. Today the group has
offices in Austin, El Paso, and Washington, DC. It has also expanded
internationally, distributing materials in more than 40 countries.
Despite its national record promoting abstinence-only programs, MISH has
tried to distance itself from the phrase "abstinence-only," presumably
because it connotes ideology, ineffectiveness, and medical inaccuracy for
many in the scientific community. Representatives of MISH have argued that
the group is not a religious or biased one, but rather a "medical
educational organization." The group's many critics disagree.
In 1995, the Texas Department of Health sent a letter to MISH criticizing a
slide show that McIlhaney had been showing throughout the state. The letter
included a detailed critique of the slides by two doctors, a registered
nurse, and the director of the state's HIV/STI epidemiology division. "Some
of the data presented suffers from investigator bias," the letter stated.
"Dr. McIlhaney's presentation tended to report the outlier data [data that
is markedly different from other values in a data set] as 'proof' that
condoms don't work rather than present those reports in the context of the
entire data set. The only data that was reported in the presentation are
those which supported his bias on the topics he addressed. Intellectual
honesty demands that he present all the data."
Friends in High Places
Despite the widespread criticism, MISH has grown to become a well-connected
organization. The group has had close ties with President George W. Bush
since his early days as governor of Texas. Bush has spoken at numerous
events sponsored by MISH, and in 1999, MISH worked with then-Governor Bush's
administration to produce the Right Choices for Youth abstinence conference.
Bush and McIlhaney have been close politically and personally for many
years, and many speculate that their close relationship is largely
responsible for Bush's promotion of abstinence-only programs as president.
In December 2001, President Bush appointed McIlhaney to the Presidential
Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA). The Union of Concerned Scientists
criticized the appointment in a
<http://www.ucsusa.org/scientific_integrity/interference/presidential-adviso
ry-council-on-hivaids.html> 2004 report, characterizing it as "another
high-profile appointment of a scientist with questionable credentials."
Specifically, the group referred to McIlhaney's "published disdain for the
use of condoms to prevent the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted
diseases and his continued advocacy of abstinence-only programs despite
negligible evidence that they actually reduce pregnancy rates among young
people."
McIlhaney's elevation in government ranks continued: in February 2003, he
was appointed to the Advisory Committee to the director of the CDC, where he
"advises the CDC Director on policy issues and broad strategies for
promoting health and quality of life." And according to the MISH website,
McIlhaney "meets regularly in Washington with Ambassador Randall Tobias,
President Bush's appointee who heads the $15 billion Global AIDS Initiative,
to discuss the medical issues surrounding AIDS policy nationally and
internationally."
MISH's political power is not limited to McIlhaney. The group's National
Advisory Board is comprised of a who's who of the abstinence-only crowd.
Board members include Elayne Bennett, president and founder of the Best
<http://www.alternet.org/module/printversion/www.bestfriendsfoundation.org/>
Friends Foundation, an abstinence-only group; Thomas Lickona, director of
the abstinence-promoting Center for the Fourth and Fifth Rs; and Dr.
Patricia Sulak, director of the Worth the Wait abstinence program.
Another prominent member of MISH's National Advisory Board is Dr. W. David
Hager, author of As Jesus Cared for Women and Stress and Women's Body, which
"recommends particular scripture readings as a treatment for premenstrual
syndrome." Bush appointed Hager to the Advisory Committee for Reproductive
Health Drugs in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2002, a
position that allowed Hager to play a significant role in the FDA's
continued delay in the decision to grant over-the-counter status for Plan B
emergency contraception (EC).
MISH's relationship with the Bush administration has also paid off
financially. The group has received more than $1.5 million in federal
funding and has government contracts with the CDC, the Maternal Child Health
Bureau, and the Texas Department of Health. In addition, high-profile
members of the Bush administration regularly attend and present at MISH's
annual conferences.
MISH also has close allies in Congress. In 2000, the group worked with Rep.
Tom Coburn (R-OK) to convince the National Institute of Health (NIH) to hold
a conference to examine the scientific research on condom effectiveness. The
NIH invited MISH to participate in the conference.
The resulting NIH report confirmed that condoms were effective in preventing
HIV and gonorrhea, but concluded that there wasn't enough evidence regarding
the effectiveness of condoms in preventing the infection HPV. MISH latched
on to the latter finding, and like many other abstinence-only organizations,
used the dangers of HPV to advance its anti-condom agenda. A recent study
<http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/354/25/2645> published in the New
England Journal of Medicine found that consistent condom usage significantly
reduces the risk of HPV transmission, providing the evidence the NIH had
been looking for.
As for the announcement about MISH's new $200,000 grant - according to a
profile in Slate <http://www.slate.com/id/2139675/> , the CDC hadn't posted
any requests for proposals in determining the recipient of the grant, and
there had been no competitive bidding process. Dr. Hager has been appointed
to lead the project and has already selected a panel to write the sex
education curriculum. It remains to be seen what the curriculum will entail,
but all logic points to the probability that it will teach a dangerous
abstinence-only message to a generation of future doctors.
Myra Batchelder is a freelance writer in Brooklyn, NY.
C 2006 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/39285/
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