The University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1300 University Blvd., Birmingham, AL, 35233, USA.
RAND Corporation, 1776 Main Street, Santa Monica, CA, 90401-3208, USA.
J Youth Adolesc. 2020 May;49(5):991-1004. doi: 10.1007/s10964-020-01211-3. Epub 2020 Feb 24.
Adolescent risky sexual behaviors can result in negative consequences such as sexually transmitted infection. However, much research effort has been placed on understanding individual characteristics, rather than the role of neighborhood environment. This study addressed the prospective effects of neighborhood and family functioning in preadolescence on risky sexual behaviors. Participants included 4179 youth (M = 11.01 years, range 8.64-13.83; 51% female) and their caregivers. Using objective and self-reported measures of neighborhood and family functioning, results from multilevel regression analyses indicated that youth residing in disordered neighborhoods or had poorer family functioning in preadolescence were more likely to initiate sexual intercourse at younger ages 5 years later. Specifically, neighborhood poverty and decay were linked to early sexual initiation, whereas neighborhood social and family processes were protective against early sexual initiation. Males were more likely to engage in risky sexual behaviors in neighborhoods with greater poverty or decay; neighborhood poverty was linked with sexual initiation in White but not African American youth. Finally, parental monitoring moderated relationships between neighborhood social resources and contraceptive use, with neighborhood social resources linked with greater contraceptive use at low levels of parental monitoring, but lower contraceptive use at high levels of parental monitoring. These findings underscore the importance of neighborhood and family contexts in adolescents' risky sexual behavior, suggesting that males and White youth are more vulnerable to the effects of neighborhood poverty and that more research is needed on the possible counterproductive function of parental monitoring in neighborhoods with greater social resources.
青少年的危险性行为可能会导致负面后果,如性传播感染。然而,大量的研究工作都集中在理解个体特征上,而不是邻里环境的作用。本研究探讨了青春期前邻里环境和家庭功能对危险性行为的前瞻性影响。参与者包括 4179 名青少年(M=11.01 岁,范围 8.64-13.83;51%为女性)及其照顾者。使用邻里环境和家庭功能的客观和自我报告测量指标,多层次回归分析的结果表明,青春期前居住在混乱的邻里环境或家庭功能较差的青少年,在 5 年后更有可能较早开始性行为。具体来说,邻里贫困和衰败与早期性行为开始有关,而邻里社会和家庭过程则能预防早期性行为开始。男性在贫困或衰败程度较高的邻里中更有可能从事危险的性行为;邻里贫困与白人青少年的性行为开始有关,但与非裔美国青少年无关。最后,父母监督调节了邻里社会资源与避孕措施使用之间的关系,邻里社会资源与父母监督程度较低时的避孕措施使用呈正相关,但与父母监督程度较高时的避孕措施使用呈负相关。这些发现强调了邻里环境和家庭环境对青少年危险性行为的重要性,表明男性和白人青少年更容易受到邻里贫困的影响,并且需要更多的研究来探讨在社会资源较多的邻里环境中,父母监督可能具有适得其反的作用。