Paper Title

Weekly and seasonal variation in sexual behaviors among adolescent women with sexually transmitted diseases

Keywords

  • adolescents
  • sexual behavior
  • seasonality
  • temporal patterns
  • sexually transmitted diseases
  • std risk
  • coital events
  • condom use
  • partner change
  • alcohol use
  • drug use
  • sexual health
  • risk behavior
  • prevention strategies
  • public health
  • sexual activity trends
  • behavioral patterns
  • youth sexuality
  • safe sex practices
  • health interventions
  • sexual risk factors
  • adolescent health
  • sexual decision-making
  • weekly variation
  • seasonal variation
  • epidemiology
  • reproductive health
  • relationship dynamics
  • sexual networks
  • health disparities
  • std prevention
  • high-risk behavior
  • sexual partners
  • adolescent risk factors
  • healthcare access
  • disease transmission
  • preventative healthcare
  • health outcomes
  • clinical research
  • public health policy
  • sexual health education

Article Type

Original Article

Research Impact Tools

Publication Info

Volume: 20 | Issue: 6 | Pages: 420–425

Published On

June, 1997

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Abstract

Purpose: The objective of this research is to describe aspects of the organization of adolescent sexual behavior in order to understand factors associated with risk for sexually transmitted diseases (STD). Methods: Subjects were 82 females (ages 16–19 years, 77% African-American) participating in a larger STD study. Subjects completed diaries for each coital event, recording date of event, partner initials, condom use, and use of drugs or alcohol before intercourse. Partner change was defined as any event for which the sex partner initials differed from those listed for the most recent previous coital event. Results: The 82 subjects recorded 1265 coital events; the average span of the records was 10 weeks. Intercourse was least likely on Sundays (154 of 1265,12.2%) and most common on Friday and Saturday (221 of 1265 for each day; 17.5%). The proportion of coital events associated with drugs or alcohol increased from Sunday to Saturday, although the proportion of coital events in which a condom was used did not vary significantly. Intercourse was most common in spring and summer, and least frequent in winter. Conclusions: These data indicate substantial temporal organization of adolescent sexual behaviors that may be related to risk of sexually transmitted diseases. Some STD-preventive interventions may be most effective when targeted to higher risk times.

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