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Paper Title

Daily Mood, Partner Support, Sexual Interest, and Sexual Activity Among Adolescent Women.

Keywords

  • sexual activity
  • adolescent women
  • daily mood
  • partner support
  • sexual interest
  • coitus
  • emotional support
  • negative mood
  • positive mood
  • diary study
  • partner interactions
  • substance use
  • coital frequency
  • sexual behavior
  • sti prevention
  • unplanned pregnancy
  • psychological factors
  • adolescent sexuality
  • behavioral patterns
  • intervention strategies
  • daily mood fluctuations
  • partner emotional support
  • sexual interest variations
  • coitus frequency
  • relationship dynamics
  • psychological well-being
  • emotional regulation
  • mood disorders
  • substance use impact
  • sexual risk behaviors
  • sexually transmitted infection (sti) prevention
  • reproductive health
  • adolescent psychology
  • developmental transitions
  • romantic relationships
  • psychosocial influences
  • public health interventions
  • sexual decision-making
  • affective states
  • gender differences
  • sexual health education
  • preventative strategies
  • risk assessment
  • adolescent sexual behavior trends
  • interpersonal relationships
  • health policy implications

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 24 | Issue : 3 | Page No : 252–257

Published On

March, 2005

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Abstract

The main objective of this study was to examine day-to-day associations of coitus, sexual interest, partner emotional support, negative mood, and positive mood among adolescent women. Diaries assessed partner interactions, sexual activity, substance use, and mood. Participants were 146 adolescent women who provided 28,376 diary days. Correlates of coitus on a given day included age, increased coital frequency in previous week, coitus on the previous day, partner support, increased same-day sexual interest, and decreased same-day negative mood. The data demonstrate complex associations of sexual interest, mood, partner interactions, and sexual activity. The findings extend understanding of the sexuality of adolescent women and have implications for a variety of interventions to reduce sexually transmitted infections and unplanned pregnancies. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

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