Adolescent expectancies, parent-adolescent communication and intentions to have sexual intercourse among inner-city, middle school youth.
Journal Article (Journal Article)
Background
The incidence and prevalence of pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections among American adolescents remain unacceptably high.Purpose
This research examines adolescent intentions to have sexual intercourse, their expectancies about having sexual intercourse, and maternal communication about the expectancies of engaging in sexual intercourse.Methods
Six hundred sixty-eight randomly selected inner-city middle school students and their mothers completed self-administered questionnaires. Adolescents reported their intentions to have sexual intercourse and the perceived positive and negative expectancies of doing so. Both mothers and adolescents reported on the frequency of communication about these expectancies.Results
Boys reported higher intentions, more positive expectancies, and lower levels of maternal communication than did girls. Expectancies statistically significantly associated with intentions focused on the positive physical, social, and emotional advantages of having sex rather than on concerns about pregnancy and HIV/AIDS. With some exceptions, maternal communication was associated with adolescents expectancies about engaging in sexual intercourse. However, only modest correlations between maternal and adolescent reports of communication were observed.Conclusions
Results indicate that intervention programs should address the positive expectancies youth have about having sex, not just the threat of pregnancy and HIV/AIDS, and should address potential gender differences in expectancies between boys and girls.Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Guilamo-Ramos, V; Jaccard, J; Dittus, P; Bouris, A; Holloway, I; Casillas, E
Published Date
- August 2007
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 34 / 1
Start / End Page
- 56 - 66
PubMed ID
- 17688397
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1532-4796
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0883-6612
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1007/bf02879921
Language
- eng