Go Back Research Article November, 2019

Prevalence of Romantic Experiences and Competencies Among 14 to 17 Year Olds: Implications for the Primary Care Setting

Abstract

Using data from 600 adolescents (14-17 years old) from the 2015 National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior, we examined the prevalence and demographic correlates of adolescents’ romantic activities (ie, group dating, dyadic dating, and relationship involvement) and their confidence in avoiding unwanted romantic experiences. Overall, 55.8% of adolescents had engaged in at least one romantic activity. More adolescents reported having gone on dyadic (42.1%) and group (37.3%) dates than had been involved in romantic relationships (32.9%). Age and gender were the most consistent correlates of each romantic activity. Each type of romantic activity becomes more common as adolescents mature. Female adolescents were less likely to report romantic activities. Approximately 25.7% of adolescents were not confident that they could turn down unwanted dates, and 34.3% were not confident that they could end a relationship they no longer wanted to be in. Clinicians can draw on our results when discussing romantic development with their adolescent patients.

Keywords

adolescent romantic experiences teen dating romantic competencies adolescent relationships group dating dyadic dating teenage relationship involvement youth romantic development dating confidence unwanted romantic experiences adolescent relationship challenges romantic decision-making teen relationship confidence primary care and adolescent romance gender differences in dating adolescent emotional well-being youth social development dating and mental health romantic relationship trends teenage dating behavior relationship termination confidence adolescent love and intimacy national survey of sexual health and behavior romantic education for teens teen relationship counseling
Details
Volume 59
Issue 2
Pages 116–126
ISSN 1938-2707
Impact Metrics