|
Please visit our sponsors!





|
Kiger's Comments
by Wanda Kiger
Feb
16, 2005
CULTURE &
COSMOS STUDY SHOWS AMERICA'S SEXUAL
BEHAVIOR HIGHLY LETHAL
The
following items are released by Culture & Cosmos regarding studies which show
that America's sexual behavior is very lethal. This report is based on a new
study that shows more than one in a hundred deaths in America is caused by
sexual behavior.
Culture & Cosmos February 8, 2005 Volume 2, Number 27 "The high toll of the
sexual revolution on the lives of Americans was made apparent in a recently
published study showing 1.3 percent of all American deaths to be caused by
sexual behavior. The study, from the current edition of the medical journal
Sexually Transmitted Infections,
examined data from 1998 to determine the overall health burden caused by sexual
activity in the US and found that women "bear a disproportionately high
proportion" of the cost that comes with sexual liberation.
The study, authored by three researchers from the Centers for Disease Control,
examined "adverse health outcomes" that result from sexual activity including
both sexually transmitted diseases, viruses and infections, infertility and
abortions. More men then women died in 1998 as a result of sexual behavior -
19,634 men compared to 10,148 women. But almost all of the deaths in men were
caused by HIV. "If HIV related
mortality were excluded, more than 80% of sexual behaviour related mortality
would be among . . . women." The study found that 5,914 women died of non-HIV
related sexual behavior; for men the number was number 1,413.
While HIV killed 4,234 women, it was cervical cancer that was leading cause of
death for women claiming 4,921 lives. Cervical cancer is caused primarily by the
human papillomavirus (HPV), the most common sexually transmitted disease. That
it causes more deaths than HIV is notable due to the politically charged nature
of HPV. Because condoms do not protect against HPV, a fact acknowledged by the
American Cancer Society, pro-family organizations have pointed to it as proof
that sexual health can be insured only by abstinence until a monogamous
marriage. Planned Parenthood Federation of America has in the past accused such
organizations of engaging in "an alarmist and misleading public policy and media
campaign."
Beyond death the report also examines the overall health effects of sexual
behavior. It found that in the course of one year, 7.5 percent of Americans
suffered from almost 20 million incidences of negative health effects brought on
by sexual behavior. Of such cases women suffered a disproportionate 62 percent
including 2.5 million cases of gonorrhea and 2.6 million cases of trichomoniasis.
The study also calculated the Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALY) cost for
illnesses brought on by sexual behavior. DALY is a number that combines into a
single measurement the loss of healthy years of life that result from an illness
with the years of life cut short by premature death due to an illness. Sexual
behavior cost women 1,224,953 disability adjusted life years while men came in
under one million.
The report did not buffet the bad news with hopeful predictions and called this
a problem not likely to go away soon. "Given the size and chronicity of HIV, HPV,
and other hepatitis virus epidemics, the overall health burden related to sexual
behaviour is unlikely to decline rapidly in coming years.
For more information you may contact the Culture of Life Foundation 1413 K
Street, NW, Suite 1000,Washington DC 20005. Phone: (202) 289-2500 Fax: (202)
289-2502 E-mail: clf@culture-of-life.org Website: http://www.culture-of-life.org
|
|