Influence of sexual arousability on partner communication mediators of condom use among African American female adolescents
Influence of sexual arousability on partner communication mediators of condom use among African American female adolescents
Background: Ample evidence shows that partner sexual communication is related to condom use. Although communication about safer sex may often occur when sexual arousal is high, no studies have examined arousability, one’s propensity for sexual arousal and partner sexual communication. The purpose of this study was to examine associations between sexual arousability and partner-related mediators of condom use among African American female adolescents, who have disproportionate risk for HIV and sexually transmissible infections (STIs). Methods: The study analysed self-reported baseline data from 701 African American females aged 14–20 years participating in a HIV/STI trial. Linear regression models examined associations between arousability and partner-related mediators of condom use (partner sexual communication self-efficacy, partner sexual communication frequency, sex refusal self-efficacy and condom use self-efficacy), controlling for age, impulsivity and relationship power. Results: Greater arousability was significantly associated with reduced levels of each partner communication outcome assessed (partner sexual communication self-efficacy, partner sexual communication frequency and sex refusal self-efficacy) but was not associated with condom use self-efficacy. Conclusions: Arousal and other positive aspects of sex have largely been ignored by HIV/STI prevention efforts, which primarily focus on individual behaviour. A population-level sexual health approach focusing on sexual wellbeing may reduce stigma, facilitate partner sexual communication and be more effective at reducing HIV/STI rates than traditional approaches.
african american, arousability, condom use, female adolescents
Swartzendurber, Andrea
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Murray, Sarah H.
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Sales, Jessica M.
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Milhausen, Robin R.
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Sanders, Stephanie A.
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Graham, Cynthia A.
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DiClemente, Ralph J.
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Wingood, Gina M.
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25 May 2015
Swartzendurber, Andrea
f2f102cf-9af7-4a96-b13d-f27b261721b1
Murray, Sarah H.
c42d41fe-a7a8-4050-b2ef-a7c484ae03b4
Sales, Jessica M.
519c0c16-fa3d-4ddc-b888-82a93e38b1ae
Milhausen, Robin R.
34cc6d84-7ab0-49a0-a3ac-054ed9b6129f
Sanders, Stephanie A.
bb4ce9a1-0d94-4fe9-9113-f2ac41ec7961
Graham, Cynthia A.
ac400331-f231-4449-a69b-ec9a477224c8
DiClemente, Ralph J.
f3a407ca-ed73-4ac3-b6da-82c4be7d7ffc
Wingood, Gina M.
17babda1-b0c6-416f-8897-96867ec0e67c
Swartzendurber, Andrea, Murray, Sarah H., Sales, Jessica M., Milhausen, Robin R., Sanders, Stephanie A., Graham, Cynthia A., DiClemente, Ralph J. and Wingood, Gina M.
(2015)
Influence of sexual arousability on partner communication mediators of condom use among African American female adolescents.
Sexual Health.
(doi:10.1071/SH15019).
(PMID:26005200)
Abstract
Background: Ample evidence shows that partner sexual communication is related to condom use. Although communication about safer sex may often occur when sexual arousal is high, no studies have examined arousability, one’s propensity for sexual arousal and partner sexual communication. The purpose of this study was to examine associations between sexual arousability and partner-related mediators of condom use among African American female adolescents, who have disproportionate risk for HIV and sexually transmissible infections (STIs). Methods: The study analysed self-reported baseline data from 701 African American females aged 14–20 years participating in a HIV/STI trial. Linear regression models examined associations between arousability and partner-related mediators of condom use (partner sexual communication self-efficacy, partner sexual communication frequency, sex refusal self-efficacy and condom use self-efficacy), controlling for age, impulsivity and relationship power. Results: Greater arousability was significantly associated with reduced levels of each partner communication outcome assessed (partner sexual communication self-efficacy, partner sexual communication frequency and sex refusal self-efficacy) but was not associated with condom use self-efficacy. Conclusions: Arousal and other positive aspects of sex have largely been ignored by HIV/STI prevention efforts, which primarily focus on individual behaviour. A population-level sexual health approach focusing on sexual wellbeing may reduce stigma, facilitate partner sexual communication and be more effective at reducing HIV/STI rates than traditional approaches.
Text
Swartzendruber_Arousability & Partner communication_19Sept14.doc
- Accepted Manuscript
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Published date: 25 May 2015
Keywords:
african american, arousability, condom use, female adolescents
Organisations:
Psychology
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Local EPrints ID: 378401
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378401
ISSN: 1448-5028
PURE UUID: 2d20d611-1464-4156-ac6b-cfb5cb237257
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Date deposited: 02 Jul 2015 11:50
Last modified: 21 Mar 2024 02:47
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Contributors
Author:
Andrea Swartzendurber
Author:
Sarah H. Murray
Author:
Jessica M. Sales
Author:
Robin R. Milhausen
Author:
Stephanie A. Sanders
Author:
Ralph J. DiClemente
Author:
Gina M. Wingood
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