Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
J Sex Res. 2010 Jul;47(4):285-300. doi: 10.1080/00224490902916009.
These studies investigate connections between magazine reading and involvement and young people's sexual health knowledge, self-efficacy, intentions, and contraception use. Study 1 assessed sexual health behaviors and magazine reading among 579 undergraduate students (69% were female; 68% were White; M(age) = 19.73). As expected, more frequent reading of mainstream magazines was associated with greater sexual health knowledge, safe-sex self-efficacy, and consistency of using contraception, although results varied across sex and magazine genre. Study 2 replicated and expanded on these findings with a survey of 422 undergraduate students (51% were female; 71% were White; 49% were age 18 or younger), incorporating a more extensive knowledge scale, questions about safe-sex intentions, and measures of magazine involvement. Results suggest that magazine use is associated with positive sexual health outcomes among young people.
这些研究调查了杂志阅读与年轻人性健康知识、自我效能、意向和避孕措施使用之间的关系。研究 1 评估了 579 名本科生的性健康行为和杂志阅读情况(69%为女性;68%为白人;平均年龄为 19.73 岁)。正如预期的那样,更频繁地阅读主流杂志与更多的性健康知识、安全性行为自我效能以及避孕措施使用的一致性有关,尽管结果因性别和杂志类型而异。研究 2 通过对 422 名本科生(51%为女性;71%为白人;49%为 18 岁或以下)的调查复制和扩展了这些发现,该调查纳入了更广泛的知识量表、关于安全性行为意向的问题以及杂志参与度的衡量标准。结果表明,杂志使用与年轻人的积极性健康结果有关。