University of Tasmania, Australia.
J Health Psychol. 2018 Feb;23(2):306-319. doi: 10.1177/1359105317741658. Epub 2017 Nov 14.
Australian public health promotion positions safe sex as a biomedical, heteronormative concept. Consequently, there is a dearth of scholarly research examining queer young women's sexual health. To fill this knowledge gap, this article considers how Australian bisexual and queer young women understand 'safe sex' and conceptualise 'good' sexual citizenship. Drawing on qualitative interviews with 15 participants in Tasmania, findings reveal that although queer women understand heterosexual safe sex, there is little awareness of safer sexual practices with female partners. We argue that gendered sexual scripts shape perceptions of sexual health risk whereby queer women adopt multiple situation-dependent approaches to safer sex.
澳大利亚的公共卫生促进措施将安全性行为视为一种生物医学的、异性恋规范的概念。因此,缺乏对酷儿年轻女性性健康的学术研究。为了填补这一知识空白,本文探讨了澳大利亚双性恋和酷儿年轻女性如何理解“安全性行为”和概念化“良好”的性公民身份。本研究通过对塔斯马尼亚州的 15 名参与者进行定性访谈,研究结果表明,尽管酷儿女性理解异性恋安全性行为,但对与女性伴侣的更安全的性行为做法几乎没有意识。我们认为,性别化的性行为脚本影响了对性健康风险的认知,酷儿女性通过多种依赖情境的方法来采取安全性行为。