Go Back Original Article February, 1997

Contraceptive Behavior and Adolescent Lifestyles: A Structural Modeling Approach

Abstract

Relations of contraceptive behavior, problem behaviors, and health-protective behaviors were examined in an ethnically and socioeconomically diverse sample of sexually active adolescents. First-order latent variables representing contraceptive use, alcohol use, drug use, aggression, delinquency, diet, exercise, seatbelt use, and dental hygiene were established, using multiple observed measures for each latent variable. Relations among these first-order latent constructs of contraception, problem behaviors, and health behaviors were examined using second-order confirmatory factor analysis. Three alternative models were compared: a second-order factor of problem behavior alone accounting for variation in contraceptive use; a second-order factor of health-protective behavior alone accounting for variation in contraceptive use; and second-order latent variables of both problem behavior and health-protective behavior accounting for variation in contraceptive use. Models including a path between health protection and contraception provided the best fit for the data. The findings demonstrate substantial organization among adolescent health and problem behaviors and suggest that contraceptive behavior should be conceptualized within broader domains of behavior.

Keywords

contraceptive behavior adolescent lifestyles structural modeling problem behaviors health-protective behaviors sexual health risk behavior adolescent contraceptive use alcohol use drug use aggression delinquency diet exercise seatbelt use dental hygiene confirmatory factor analysis health behavior models reproductive health safe sex practices adolescent decision-making public health behavioral patterns risk reduction sti prevention pregnancy prevention youth health social determinants of health sexual risk-taking health psychology adolescent well-being protective factors
Details
Volume 7
Issue 3
Pages 307–329
ISSN 1532-7795
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