Department of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT, USA,
J Youth Adolesc. 2015 Jan;44(1):170-83. doi: 10.1007/s10964-013-0082-7. Epub 2013 Dec 20.
Rates of STIs, HIV, and pregnancy remain high among adolescents in the US, and recent approaches to reducing sexual risk have shown limited success. Future expectations, or the extent to which one expects an event to actually occur, may influence sexual risk behavior. This prospective study uses longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 (n = 3,205 adolescents; 49.8% female) to examine the impact of previously derived latent classes of future expectations on sexual risk behavior. Cox regression and latent growth models were used to determine the effect of future expectations on age at first biological child, number of sexual partners, and inconsistent contraception use. The results indicate that classes of future expectations were uniquely associated with each outcome. The latent class reporting expectations of drinking and being arrested was consistently associated with the greatest risks of engaging in sexual risk behavior compared with the referent class, which reported expectations of attending school and little engagement in delinquent behaviors. The class reporting expectations of attending school and drinking was associated with having greater numbers of sexual partners and inconsistent contraception use but not with age at first biological child. The third class, defined by expectations of victimization, was not associated with any outcome in adjusted models, despite being associated with being younger at the birth of their first child in the unadjusted analysis. Gender moderated specific associations between latent classes and sexual risk outcomes. Future expectations, conceptualized as a multidimensional construct, may have a unique ability to explain sexual risk behaviors over time. Future strategies should target multiple expectations and use multiple levels of influence to improve individual future expectations prior to high school and throughout the adolescent period.
美国青少年的性传播感染(STIs)、艾滋病病毒(HIV)和怀孕率仍然很高,最近减少性风险的方法收效甚微。未来期望,即一个人期望某件事情实际发生的程度,可能会影响性行为风险。本前瞻性研究使用了来自 1997 年全国青年纵向调查(National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997,简称 NLSY97;n = 3205 名青少年;女性占 49.8%)的纵向数据,来检验先前得出的未来期望潜类对性行为风险的影响。使用 Cox 回归和潜在增长模型来确定未来期望对首次生育年龄、性伴侣数量和不一致使用避孕措施的影响。结果表明,未来期望的潜类与每种结果都有独特的关联。与参照潜类(报告期望上学和很少参与犯罪行为)相比,报告期望饮酒和被捕的潜类与参与性行为风险的最大风险始终相关。报告期望上学和饮酒的潜类与性伴侣数量更多和不一致使用避孕措施有关,但与首次生育年龄无关。第三类,即被侵害的期望,在调整后的模型中与任何结果都没有关联,但在未调整的分析中,与首次生育孩子时年龄较小有关。性别调节了潜类与性行为风险结果之间的特定关联。未来期望被概念化为一个多维结构,它可能具有独特的能力来解释随着时间的推移性行为风险的变化。未来的策略应该针对多种期望,并利用多种影响力来提高青少年时期之前和整个青少年时期的个人未来期望。