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Paper Title

Sex Surveys in Europe: Reflections on over Four Decades of Sexual Behavior and Sexual Health Surveillance

Authors

Peer Briken
Peer Briken
Hanneke de Graaf
Hanneke de Graaf
Kirstin Mitchell
Kirstin Mitchell
Soazig Clifton
Soazig Clifton
MARIA FERNANDA SUAREZ MARIN
MARIA FERNANDA SUAREZ MARIN
Alexis Dewaele
Alexis Dewaele
Joke Dupont
Joke Dupont
Doc. PhDr. Kateřina Králová
Doc. PhDr. Kateřina Králová
Gunta Lazdane
Gunta Lazdane
Osmo Kontula
Osmo Kontula

Keywords

  • Sexual Health
  • Population Surveys
  • Sexual Behavior
  • Sexual Health Prevention
  • Health Policy
  • Sexual Education
  • Survey Methodology
  • Cross-Country Comparison
  • Sociopolitical Challenges
  • Sociocultural Factors
  • Questionnaire Design
  • Recruitment Methods
  • Interview Format
  • European Sex Surveys
  • Data Quality
  • National Surveys
  • Health Research
  • Methodological Challenges
  • Political Support
  • Funding for Health Research

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 60 | Issue : 7 | Page No : 1020-1033

Published On

June, 2023

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Abstract

Sexual expression is fundamental to human existence and an important topic of enquiry in its own right. Understanding sexual behavior is also essential to establish effective sexual health prevention activities (e.g., education), services and policies, and to assess the progress of policies and action plans. Questions on sexual health are rarely included in general health surveys, and therefore dedicated population studies are required. Many countries lack both funding and sociopolitical support to conduct such surveys. A tradition of periodic population sexual health surveys exists in Europe but the methods used (e.g., in questionnaire construction, recruiting methods or interview format) vary from one survey to another. This is because the researchers within each country are confronted with conceptual, methodological, sociocultural and budgetary challenges, for which they find different solutions. These differences limit comparison across countries and pooling of estimates, but the variation in approaches provides a rich source of learning on population survey research. In this review, survey leads from 11 European countries discuss how their surveys evolved during the past four decades in response to sociohistorical and political context, and the challenges they encountered. The review discusses the solutions they identified and shows that it is possible to create well designed surveys which collect high quality data on a range of aspects of sexual health, despite the sensitivity of the topic. Herewith, we hope to support the research community in their perennial quest for political support and funding, and ongoing drive to advance methodology in future national sex surveys.

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