Sexual information sources and psychosexual well-being: cultural and gender differences among young people in China and the UK
Sexual information sources and psychosexual well-being: cultural and gender differences among young people in China and the UK
This study examined how the reported acquisition of sexual information from ten sources (school, healthcare, religious institutions, community, parents, siblings, peers, internet, pornography and movies/TV) was associated with sexual satisfaction, sexual pleasure, sexual inferiority, and relational sexual shame among 1553 young people (18–25 years) in China and the UK. Linear mixed-effects models tested cultural and gender differences in reported information acquisition, and structural equation modelling assessed associations with psychosexual well-being. In both countries, the most common sources of sexual information were peers, the internet, and pornography; religious institutions were the least common. Acquisition of sexual information from healthcare or pornography (and community in China) was positively associated with sexual satisfaction. Acquisition from pornography or the internet was positively associated with sexual pleasure in China. Acquisition from the internet was positively associated with feelings of sexual inferiority, as was (only in China) pornography. Relational sexual shame was positively associated with acquisition from the internet and was also negatively associated with acquisition from religious institutions (only in China). In the UK, women reported lower satisfaction and higher sexual inferiority than men, whereas in China, men reported higher sexual inferiority than women. Findings highlight the need for culturally and gender-responsive sex and sexuality education.
Li, Yishu
5930cec2-23f0-400a-9ece-fb78322d8c8e
Ingham, Roger
e3f11583-dc06-474f-9b36-4536dc3f7b99
Armstrong, Heather
3dc9c223-1a61-47ad-ab0b-50d06cddf4f2
Li, Yishu
5930cec2-23f0-400a-9ece-fb78322d8c8e
Ingham, Roger
e3f11583-dc06-474f-9b36-4536dc3f7b99
Armstrong, Heather
3dc9c223-1a61-47ad-ab0b-50d06cddf4f2
Li, Yishu, Ingham, Roger and Armstrong, Heather
(2026)
Sexual information sources and psychosexual well-being: cultural and gender differences among young people in China and the UK.
Sex Education.
(doi:10.1080/14681811.2026.2637525).
Abstract
This study examined how the reported acquisition of sexual information from ten sources (school, healthcare, religious institutions, community, parents, siblings, peers, internet, pornography and movies/TV) was associated with sexual satisfaction, sexual pleasure, sexual inferiority, and relational sexual shame among 1553 young people (18–25 years) in China and the UK. Linear mixed-effects models tested cultural and gender differences in reported information acquisition, and structural equation modelling assessed associations with psychosexual well-being. In both countries, the most common sources of sexual information were peers, the internet, and pornography; religious institutions were the least common. Acquisition of sexual information from healthcare or pornography (and community in China) was positively associated with sexual satisfaction. Acquisition from pornography or the internet was positively associated with sexual pleasure in China. Acquisition from the internet was positively associated with feelings of sexual inferiority, as was (only in China) pornography. Relational sexual shame was positively associated with acquisition from the internet and was also negatively associated with acquisition from religious institutions (only in China). In the UK, women reported lower satisfaction and higher sexual inferiority than men, whereas in China, men reported higher sexual inferiority than women. Findings highlight the need for culturally and gender-responsive sex and sexuality education.
Text
Sexual information sources supplemental final accepted version Li et al 2026
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
Sexual information sources final accepted manuscript Li et al 2026
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
Sexual information sources and psychosexual well-being cultural and gender differences among young people in China and the UK
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 23 February 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 March 2026
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 510724
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510724
ISSN: 1468-1811
PURE UUID: ef577fac-9d65-4935-8c44-87f7eccce6f4
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 20 Apr 2026 16:38
Last modified: 21 Apr 2026 01:58
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Yishu Li
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics