Ethier Kathleen A, Harper Christopher R, Hoo Elizabeth, Dittus Patricia J
Office of the Director, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Division of Adolescent and School Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
J Adolesc Health. 2016 Nov;59(5):570-576. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2016.06.011. Epub 2016 Aug 23.
The association between parental monitoring and adolescent behavior is well established. Past research suggests that parents monitor adolescent activities through parental control, solicitation of information, and youth disclosure, which increase parents' knowledge of youth activity leading to decreased risk behavior. However, there is mixed evidence of the impact of these efforts on sexual behavior. We examined these strategies from the adolescent perspective and assessed their impact on the initiation of sexual activity across the transition from middle school to high school.
Analyses include 533 primarily Latino adolescents, who had not yet had sex in eighth grade and were surveyed yearly through 10th grade.
Adolescents who in eighth grade reported greater parental knowledge and more family rules about dating were less likely to initiate sex between eighth and 10th grade. Exchange of information, through parental solicitation and youth disclosure, and parental control, through rules about friends and dating, as well as maternal relationship satisfaction were significant predictors of parental knowledge. There were no gender differences in the impact of dating rules and parental knowledge on sexual initiation, but the paths to acquiring knowledge did differ by gender.
Results suggest that parental monitoring at earlier ages has an impact on sexual initiation. Effective monitoring is an active process within a family that includes setting boundaries and exchanging information. Interventions that encourage family rules, provide strategies for improving parental solicitation of information, and increase youth disclosure by enhancing the maternal-child relationship may be more likely to impact sexual initiation.
父母监督与青少年行为之间的关联已得到充分证实。以往研究表明,父母通过父母控制、信息获取和青少年自我表露来监督青少年的活动,这些方式会增加父母对青少年活动的了解,从而降低风险行为。然而,关于这些措施对性行为影响的证据并不一致。我们从青少年的角度审视了这些策略,并评估了它们在从初中到高中过渡期间对性活动开始的影响。
分析纳入了533名主要为拉丁裔的青少年,他们在八年级时尚未发生性行为,并在十年级之前每年接受调查。
在八年级时报告父母了解更多情况且关于约会有更多家庭规则的青少年,在八年级到十年级之间开始性行为的可能性较小。通过父母询问和青少年自我表露进行的信息交流,以及通过关于朋友和约会的规则进行的父母控制,还有母亲的关系满意度,都是父母了解情况的重要预测因素。约会规则和父母了解情况对性开始的影响没有性别差异,但获取知识的途径因性别而异。
结果表明,早期的父母监督对性开始有影响。有效的监督是家庭内部的一个积极过程,包括设定界限和交流信息。鼓励家庭规则、提供改善父母信息获取策略以及通过加强母子关系增加青少年自我表露的干预措施,可能更有可能影响性开始。