Upadhyay Ushma D, Hindin Michelle J
Center for Communication Programs, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 111 Market Place, Suite 310, Baltimore, MD 21202, USA.
Stud Fam Plann. 2007 Sep;38(3):173-86. doi: 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2007.00129.x.
This study examines the intergenerational effects of parents' marital relationship and the status of women on children's age at first sexual intercourse in Cebu, Philippines. Matched longitudinal data for 1,661 mothers and their children are analyzed. The mothers were interviewed in 1994, when their children were aged 9 to 11, about sociodemographic characteristics, their marital relationships, and women's status. Cox proportional hazards models are used to assess unmarried children's age at first sex as reported by the children in 2005 at ages 20 to 22. After multivariate adjustment, the analysis indicates that when parents make household decisions jointly, sons report delaying first sex. In households in which mothers have higher status, daughters report delayed first sex. The results demonstrate that long-term positive effects on children, particularly delaying first sex, occur in families in which parental decisionmaking is cooperative and in which women have high status.
本研究考察了菲律宾宿务地区父母婚姻关系及女性地位对子女首次性交年龄的代际影响。分析了1661名母亲及其子女的匹配纵向数据。1994年,当这些母亲的孩子年龄在9至11岁时,对母亲进行了访谈,内容涉及社会人口特征、她们的婚姻关系以及女性地位。使用Cox比例风险模型评估2005年时年龄在20至22岁的未婚子女报告的首次性行为年龄。经过多变量调整后,分析表明,当父母共同做出家庭决策时,儿子报告首次性行为延迟。在母亲地位较高的家庭中,女儿报告首次性行为延迟。结果表明,在父母决策合作且女性地位较高的家庭中,对子女会产生长期的积极影响,尤其是延迟首次性行为。