McCauley Heather L, Dick Rebecca N, Tancredi Daniel J, Goldstein Sandi, Blackburn Samantha, Silverman Jay G, Monasterio Erica, James Lisa, Miller Elizabeth
Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Division of Adolescent Medicine, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Division of Adolescent Medicine, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
J Adolesc Health. 2014 Nov;55(5):652-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2014.04.020. Epub 2014 Jun 21.
Little is known about adolescent relationship abuse (ARA) and related sexual and reproductive health among females who either identify as lesbian or bisexual or engage in sexual behavior with female partners (i.e., sexual minority girls [SMGs]).
Baseline data were collected from 564 sexually active girls ages 14-19 years seeking care at eight California school-based health centers participating in a randomized controlled trial. Associations between ARA, sexual minority status and study outcomes (vaginal, oral, and anal sex, number and age of sex partners, contraceptive nonuse, reproductive coercion, sexually transmitted infection [STI] and pregnancy testing) were assessed via logistic regression models for clustered survey data.
SMGs comprised 23% (n = 130) of the sample. Controlling for exposure to ARA, SMGs were less likely to report recent vaginal sex (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], .51; 95% confidence interval [CI], .35-.75) and more likely to report recent oral sex (AOR, 2.01; 95% CI, 1.38-2.92) and anal sex (AOR, 1.76; 95% CI, 1.26-2.46) compared with heterosexual girls. Heterosexual girls with ARA exposure (AOR, 2.85; 95% CI, 1.07-7.59) and SMGs without ARA exposure (AOR, 3.01; 95% CI, 2.01-4.50) were more likely than nonabused heterosexual girls be seeking care for STI testing or treatment than heterosexual girls without recent victimization.
Findings suggest the need for attention to STI risk among all girls, but SMGs in particular. Clinicians should be trained to assess youth for sexual contacts and sexual identity and counsel all youth on healthy relationships, consensual sex, and safer sex practices relevant to their sexual experiences.
对于那些自认为是女同性恋或双性恋,或与女性伴侣有性行为的女性(即性少数女孩[SMG]),青少年关系虐待(ARA)以及相关的性与生殖健康情况鲜为人知。
从564名年龄在14至19岁、有性活动的女孩中收集基线数据,这些女孩在加利福尼亚州的八所参与随机对照试验的校内健康中心寻求护理。通过对聚类调查数据的逻辑回归模型,评估ARA、性少数群体身份与研究结果(阴道、口交和肛交、性伴侣数量和年龄、未使用避孕措施、生殖胁迫、性传播感染[STI]和妊娠检测)之间的关联。
性少数女孩占样本的23%(n = 130)。在控制ARA暴露因素后,与异性恋女孩相比,性少数女孩报告近期有阴道性行为的可能性较小(调整后的优势比[AOR],0.51;95%置信区间[CI],0.35 - 0.75),而报告近期有口交(AOR,2.01;95% CI,1.38 - 2.92)和肛交(AOR,1.76;95% CI,1.26 - 2.46)的可能性较大。与未受虐待的异性恋女孩相比,有ARA暴露的异性恋女孩(AOR,2.85;95% CI,1.07 - 7.59)和没有ARA暴露的性少数女孩(AOR,3.01;95% CI,2.01 - 4.50)因性传播感染检测或治疗而寻求护理的可能性更大。
研究结果表明,所有女孩,尤其是性少数女孩,都需要关注性传播感染风险。临床医生应接受培训,以评估青少年的性接触和性身份,并就与其性经历相关的健康关系、双方自愿的性行为和更安全的性行为方式为所有青少年提供咨询。