'ADOLESCENT AND FAMILY HEALTH' Study: Teenage virgins more successful later in life



Virgins at age 18 had higher incomes 20 years later than non-virgins.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- Remaining a virgin through adolescence brings a host of positive effects, according to a recent study.
The study, "Association of Virginity at Age 18 With Educational, Economic, Social and Health Outcomes in Middle Adulthood," examined the outcome of men and women who remain virgins until they are 18 and was published in Adolescent and Family Health, vol. 3, no. 4.
"It is very much as we suspected -- that adolescent virginity has a significant impact on well-being in middle adulthood," said Focus on the Family medical issues analyst Dr. Reginald Finger, M.D. "We found that men and women who were virgins at age 18, when evaluated approximately 20 years later, had about half the risk of divorce, had completed about an additional year of education and had annual incomes nearly 20 percent higher than those who were not virgins at 18. We used 18 as the cutoff age because it gave approximately equal populations of virgins and non-virgins to study.
"We found, as well, that these better outcomes were not merely the result of avoiding teenage pregnancy or fatherhood," Finger continued. "The outcomes are inherent to remaining abstinent."
The study was conducted by analyzing information on 3,750 men and 3,620 women in the 1970-2000 waves of the National Longitudinal Study of Youth.
The benefits of abstinence
"In addition, we found that female virgins were more likely than their non-virgin counterparts to have a positive financial net worth and were almost half as likely as non-virgins to use welfare benefits," Finger said.
"The unmistakable message of this study is that abstinence is the best course for our children and teens. Focus on the Family constantly encourages abstinence until marriage as the best choice -- the one that is likely to lead to healthy outcomes in several significant measures of well-being. Abstinence is more that just avoiding STDs and teenage pregnancy -- as the condom-based curricula seek. Abstinence is, without a doubt, the only choice to give our next generation the best chance in life, Finger said.
The study was conducted by Finger, Tonya Thelen, B.S.; John T. Vessey, Ph.D.; Joanna K. Mohn, M.D.; and Joshua R. Mann, M.D., M.P.H.
XTo view the full study, visit the Adolescent and Family Health Web site at http://www.afhjournal.org/toc.asp?issue=0304.