Paper Title

Factors associated with time of day of sexual activity among adolescent women

Keywords

  • sexuality
  • parents
  • sexual behavior
  • adolescent sexual behavior
  • time of day of coitus
  • adolescent women
  • sexual activity timing
  • partner influence
  • parental supervision
  • family factors
  • relationship dynamics
  • sexual interest
  • mood and sexual behavior
  • weekend vs. school day sex
  • afternoon vs. evening coitus
  • youth sexual decision-making
  • emotional support and sex
  • risk factors for adolescent coitus
  • school attendance and sexual activity
  • adolescent romantic relationships
  • youth sexual health
  • teen relationship conflicts
  • adolescent sexuality research
  • sexual behavior patterns
  • public health and teen sexuality
  • adolescent risk behaviors
  • youth intimacy and relationships
  • social determinants of teen sex
  • daily sexual activity logs
  • sexual behavior epidemiology

Article Type

Original Article

Research Impact Tools

Publication Info

Volume: 38 | Issue: 3 | Pages: 275–281

Published On

March, 2006

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Abstract

Background Our objective was to describe familial, intrapersonal, and partner-related factors associated with time of day of sexual activity among adolescent women. Methods Annual questionnaires and daily diaries were collected from 106 adolescents. Participants contributed up to 3 questionnaires and 5 12-week diary periods over 27 months. Predictor variables included type of day (weekend, school day, vacation day); partner variables (argument with partner, partner emotional support, time spent with partner); parent/family variables such as supervision, monitoring, and attitudes about adolescent sexual behavior; and mood and behavior variables such as negative mood, positive mood, and sexual interest. The outcome variable for each diary day was no coitus, coitus between noon and 6 pm, or coitus after 6 pm. Results Coitus occurred on 12.0% of the diary days. Coital events were more than twice as likely to occur after 6 pm (8.5% of days) than in the afternoon (3.5% of days). Afternoon sex was least likely to occur on school days whereas evening sex occurred most often on weekends. An argument with a partner, partner emotional support, time spent with partner, sexual interest, and coital frequency were associated with increased likelihood of afternoon sex, whereas parental supervision and negative mood were associated with decreased likelihood of afternoon sex. For school days, skipping school was associated with increased likelihood of afternoon sex. Evening/night sexual activity was not associated with any parent/family variables. Conclusion Afternoon sex on school days is relatively uncommon. Direct parental supervision may decrease afternoon sexual activity but relationship and intrapersonal factors also are important factors in the timing of sexual activity on any given day.

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