Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
Sex Transm Infect. 2018 Dec;94(8):594-597. doi: 10.1136/sextrans-2017-053431. Epub 2018 Mar 24.
Feelings of intimacy, perceptions of partner concurrency (PPC) and perceptions of risk for an STD (PRSTD) are meaningful and dynamic attributes of adolescent sexual relationships. Our objective was to examine whether variations in these STI-associated feelings and perceptions predicted incident and/or infection within a prospective cohort of urban adolescent women.
A cohort of clinic-recruited women aged 16-19 completed daily surveys on feelings and risk perceptions about each current sex partner on a smartphone continuously for up to 18 months. Urine was tested for and every 3 months. Daily responses were averaged across the week. As overall means for trust, closeness and commitment were high, data were coded to indicate any decrease in feelings from the previous week. PRSTD and PPC were reverse coded to indicate any increase from the previous week. An index was created to examine the cumulative effect of variation in these feelings and perceptions. Generalised linear models were used to account for correlation among repeated measures within relationships.
For each week that there was a decrease in trust, there was a 45% increase in the risk of being infected with an STI at follow-up (relative risk (RR) 1.45, 95% CI 1.18 to 1.78, P=0.004). Neither a decrease in closeness or commitment, nor an increase in PRSTD or PPC was associated with an STI outcome. Cumulatively, the index measure indicated that a change in an additional feeling or perception over the week increased the odds of an STI by 14% (RR 1.14, 95% CI 1.02 to 1.29, P=0.026).
A decrease in feelings of trust towards a main partner may be a more sensitive indicator of STI risk than PRSTD, PPC or commitment. The next generation of behavioural interventions for youth will need strategies to address feelings of intimacy within adolescent romantic relationships.
亲密感、伴侣同时性认知(PPC)和性传播疾病风险认知(PRSTD)是青少年性关系中有意义且动态的特征。我们的目的是检验这些与性传播感染相关的感觉和认知的变化是否能预测前瞻性队列中城市青少年女性的新发感染。
一个由 16-19 岁的诊所招募的女性队列,在智能手机上连续 18 个月内每天对每个当前性伴侣的亲密感和风险认知进行调查。每 3 个月对尿液进行 检测。每周的每日回复取平均值。由于信任、亲密和承诺的总体平均值较高,因此数据编码为表示与前一周相比感觉的任何下降。PRSTD 和 PPC 被反向编码,以表示与前一周相比的任何增加。创建了一个指数来检查这些感觉和认知变化的累积效应。广义线性模型用于解释关系内重复测量的相关性。
每周信任下降一周,后续感染性传播感染的风险增加 45%(相对风险 (RR) 1.45,95%置信区间 1.18 至 1.78,P=0.004)。亲密感或承诺的下降,或 PRSTD 或 PPC 的增加均与性传播感染结果无关。累积指数测量表明,一周内额外的感觉或认知变化增加了 14%的性传播感染风险(RR 1.14,95%置信区间 1.02 至 1.29,P=0.026)。
与主要伴侣的信任感下降可能比 PRSTD、PPC 或承诺更能敏感地预测性传播感染风险。下一代针对青年的行为干预措施将需要制定策略来解决青少年浪漫关系中的亲密感。