Federally Funded Sex Education: Strengthening and Expanding Evidence-Based Programs

Reproductive rights are under attack. Will you help us fight back with facts?

All young people should have access to comprehensive sexual and reproductive health information that is medically accurate, LGBTQ inclusive, and culturally and age appropriate so that they can make informed decisions about their sexual behavior, relationships and reproductive choices. Sex is already part of many adolescents’ lives, and they deserve to receive high-quality information to inform their decision-making. Unfortunately, just 30 states and the District of Columbia require sex education to be taught in schools, and fewer states require that the school curricula include key sex education topics or even medically accurate information. The federal government also wastes $110 million per year on misleading and harmful programs that only cover abstinence. Federal policymakers have an opportunity to strengthen existing sex education programs by funding them at adequate levels and to create a new comprehensive sex education funding stream through the Real Education and Access for Healthy Youth Act.

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How federally funded sex education programs work

There are currently two federal funding streams for evidence-based and medically accurate sex education: the Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program (TPPP) and the Personal Responsibility Education Program (PREP).

Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program

Personal Responsibility Education Program

Comprehensive sex education

Impact of sex education programs

Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program

Personal Responsibility Education Program

Comprehensive sex education

What policymakers can do

Congress and the Biden-Harris administration should take the following steps: