Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Researchers conclude not enough young religious women use contraception!

TITLE: Lower Use of Sexual and Reproductive Health Services among Women with Frequent Religious Participation, Regardless of Sexual Experience.
Abstract Purpose: To investigate associations between religious characteristics and sexual and reproductive health (SRH) service use among young women in the United States. Methods: We combined two cycles of data from the U.S. population-based reproductive health survey, The National Survey of Family Growth (2002 and 2006-2008). Our analysis was restricted to young women aged 15-24 years (n=4421). We tested relationships between religious characteristics, including religious affiliation, service participation, and importance of religion in daily life, and use of SRH services for contraception, sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing/treatment, and routine gynecologic examination care within the last year. Results: Nearly all young women identified a current religious affiliation (82%), with 46% identifying Protestant and 28% Catholic. Three quarters (75%) of young women reported current religious service participation, the majority of whom had experienced sexual intercourse (70%); 31% reported weekly religious service participation. Over half (59%) had used SRH services recently. In unadjusted analyses, young women with current religious affiliation who participated in services weekly and deemed religion important had lower proportions of SRH service use than their counterparts (all p<0.001). In multivariate regression models, young women with less-than-weekly religious service participation were 50% more likely to use services than those participating weekly (odds ratio [OR] 1.5, confidence interval [CI] 1.3, 2.1, p<0.001), even among sexually experienced women. Conclusions: Increasing frequency of current religious service participation was negatively associated with SRH service use among young women, despite sexual experience. Religiously and sexually active young women in the United States may have an unmet need for SRH care.

Does it occur to these folks that maybe because these women are religious and not as sexually active they might not need these services?

They don't conclude: Good news! Religious participation is associated a reduced use of SRH (and probably a reduced NEED). Let's inform the public to encourage believers to engage in religious practice.

They say: oh no, not enough of these women are using our services!

And did any of them bother to ask whether their needs were met?

No.