Adolescents' values, sexuality, and contraception in a rural New York county |
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Authors: | N McCormick A Izzo J Folcik |
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Abstract: | 75 male and 88 female high school students in a rural county of New York completed a questionnaire asking about personal values and sexual experiences. Religiosity was not likely to affect the incidence of intercourse or effectiveness of contraceptive use. Students with more liberal premarital sexual and profeminist standards usually became more sexually intimate with their dates than did conservative students, but these standards did not predict coital frequency or effective contraceptive use. Different groups exhibited remarkably homogeneous sexual and contraceptive behavior. Nonvirgins had coitus sporadically or on the average of only twice a month. In addition, regardless of their values, most nonvirgins were contraceptive risk takers, partly for fear of interfering with pleasure, and partly because sporadic sex was not perceived by the adolescents to be risky. Rejecting the most, reliable methods available (e.g. birth control pills and IUDs), the condom was the most effective contraceptive used by the majority (57%) and 21% of the nonvirgins relied exclusively on such ineffective contraceptives as withdrawal, trusting in luck, and douching. Younger adolescents may be at particular risk, being more impulse motivated and egocentric, and less likely to seek adult-furnished family planning, especially in a rural community where anonymity is more difficult to protect. Given the uniformity of contraceptive behavior among younger adolescents, and the increasing likelihood of contraceptive use with increasing age of 1st coitus, future study will be needed on the impact of cognitive and emotional maturity, as well as that of environment and family planning resources on young adolescents' contraceptive use. |
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