Okigbo Chinelo C, Kabiru Caroline W, Mumah Joyce N, Mojola Sanyu A, Beguy Donatien
Department of Maternal and Child Health, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
African Population and Health Research Center, APHRC Campus, Manga Close, Off Kirawa Road, Nairobi, Kenya.
Reprod Health. 2015 Aug 21;12:73. doi: 10.1186/s12978-015-0069-9.
Several studies have demonstrated a link between young people's sexual behavior and levels of parental monitoring, parent-child communication, and parental discipline in Western countries. However, little is known about this association in African settings, especially among young people living in high poverty settings such as urban slums. The objective of the study was to assess the influence of parental factors (monitoring, communication, and discipline) on the transition to first sexual intercourse among unmarried adolescents living in urban slums in Kenya.
Longitudinal data collected from young people living in two slums in Nairobi, Kenya were used. The sample was restricted to unmarried adolescents aged 12-19 years at Wave 1 (weighted n = 1927). Parental factors at Wave 1 were used to predict adolescents' transition to first sexual intercourse by Wave 2. Relevant covariates including the adolescents' age, sex, residence, school enrollment, religiosity, delinquency, and peer models for risk behavior were controlled for. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to assess the associations of interest. All analyses were conducted using Stata version 13.
Approximately 6% of our sample transitioned to first sexual intercourse within the one-year study period; there was no sex difference in the transition rate. In the multivariate analyses, male adolescents who reported communication with their mothers were less likely to transition to first sexual intercourse compared to those who did not (p < 0.05). This association persisted even after controlling for relevant covariates (OR: ≤0.33; p < 0.05). However, parental monitoring, discipline, and communication with their fathers did not predict transition to first sexual intercourse for male adolescents. For female adolescents, parental monitoring, discipline, and communication with fathers predicted transition to first sexual intercourse; however, only communication with fathers remained statistically significant after controlling for relevant covariates (OR: 0.30; 95% C.I.: 0.13-0.68).
This study provides evidence that cross-gender communication with parents is associated with a delay in the onset of sexual intercourse among slum-dwelling adolescents. Targeted adolescent sexual and reproductive health programmatic interventions that include parents may have significant impacts on delaying sexual debut, and possibly reducing sexual risk behaviors, among young people in high-risk settings such as slums.
多项研究表明,在西方国家,年轻人的性行为与父母的监督、亲子沟通及父母的管教程度之间存在关联。然而,在非洲地区,尤其是生活在城市贫民窟等贫困程度较高地区的年轻人中,这种关联鲜为人知。本研究的目的是评估父母因素(监督、沟通和管教)对肯尼亚城市贫民窟未婚青少年首次性行为转变的影响。
使用从肯尼亚内罗毕两个贫民窟的年轻人收集的纵向数据。样本仅限于第1波时年龄在12 - 19岁的未婚青少年(加权n = 1927)。第1波时的父母因素用于预测青少年到第2波时首次性行为的转变。控制了相关协变量,包括青少年的年龄、性别、居住地、入学情况、宗教信仰、犯罪行为以及危险行为的同伴榜样。使用多变量逻辑回归模型评估感兴趣的关联。所有分析均使用Stata 13版本进行。
在为期一年的研究期内,我们样本中约6%的人转变为首次性行为;转变率没有性别差异。在多变量分析中,报告与母亲沟通的男性青少年与未报告的相比,转变为首次性行为的可能性较小(p < 0.05)。即使在控制了相关协变量后,这种关联仍然存在(比值比:≤0.33;p < 0.05)。然而,父母的监督、管教以及与父亲的沟通并不能预测男性青少年首次性行为的转变。对于女性青少年,父母的监督、管教以及与父亲的沟通可预测首次性行为的转变;然而,在控制了相关协变量后,只有与父亲的沟通仍具有统计学意义(比值比:0.30;95%置信区间:0.13 - 0.68)。
本研究提供了证据表明,与父母的跨性别沟通与贫民窟青少年性行为开始时间的延迟有关。包括父母在内的针对性青少年性与生殖健康项目干预措施,可能会对高风险环境(如贫民窟)中的年轻人延迟首次性行为以及可能减少性风险行为产生重大影响。