Boston College School of Social Work, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA, 02467, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Jan 10;22(1):59. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-12437-6.
About 10% of children worldwide do not live with either of their biological parents, and although some of these children are orphans, many have living parents. While research shows that orphaned children in Sub-Saharan Africa tend to engage in more sexual risk behaviors than their peers, possibly due to decreased parental oversight and support, it is unclear if these effects also apply to children separated from their living parents. Exploring the question of whether living without parents, regardless of whether they are deceased, is linked to greater sexual risk-taking, this study is the first, to our knowledge, to examine correlates of parental care status in a multi-country, nationally-representative analysis.
This study was a secondary analysis of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Violence Against Children Surveys from Kenya, Malawi, Tanzania, Nigeria, and Zambia. We conducted logistic regressions on N = 6770 surveys of youth aged 13 to 17 years to determine if living with their biological parents predicted the odds of engaging in risky sexual behavior, controlling for demographic factors including orphanhood. Post-hoc regressions examined specific risk behaviors.
Compared to those living with both parents, youth not living with either parent had heightened odds of engaging in any sexual risk behavior, even when controlling for orphanhood (OR = 2.56, 95% CI: [1.96, 3.33]). Non-parental care predicted heightened odds of non-condom use (OR = 3.35, 95% CI: [2.38, 4.72]), early sexual debut (OR = 1.80, 95% CI: [1.31, 2.46]), and more sexual partners (β = .60, p < .001).
This study extends prior research linking orphanhood and sexual risk behavior, lending credence to the idea that it is not parental death, but rather parental absence, that leads to sexual risk in youth. Public health programming in Sub-Saharan Africa should consider targeting not only "orphaned youth," but all children separated from their parents.
全球约有 10%的儿童没有与亲生父母中的任何一方生活在一起,尽管其中一些儿童是孤儿,但许多儿童的父母仍然在世。尽管研究表明,撒哈拉以南非洲地区的孤儿儿童往往比同龄人更容易从事性风险行为,这可能是由于父母监督和支持的减少,但目前尚不清楚这些影响是否也适用于与父母分离的儿童。本研究旨在探讨无论父母是否去世,与父母分离是否与更大的性风险行为有关,这是首次在多国家、全国代表性分析中研究父母照顾状况的相关因素。
本研究是对美国疾病控制与预防中心的《暴力侵害儿童调查报告》中肯尼亚、马拉维、坦桑尼亚、尼日利亚和赞比亚的调查数据的二次分析。我们对 6770 名 13 至 17 岁青少年的调查进行了逻辑回归分析,以确定与父母同住是否能预测青少年从事危险性行为的几率,同时控制包括孤儿身份在内的人口统计学因素。事后回归分析检查了特定的风险行为。
与与父母双方同住的青少年相比,与父母任何一方都不住在一起的青少年从事任何性风险行为的几率都更高,即使控制了孤儿身份(OR=2.56,95%CI:[1.96,3.33])。非父母照顾预测了未使用避孕套(OR=3.35,95%CI:[2.38,4.72])、性初体验较早(OR=1.80,95%CI:[1.31,2.46])和更多性伴侣(β=0.60,p<0.001)的几率更高。
本研究扩展了先前将孤儿身份与性风险行为联系起来的研究,为这样一种观点提供了依据,即导致青少年发生性风险的不是父母死亡,而是父母的缺失。撒哈拉以南非洲的公共卫生规划应考虑不仅针对“孤儿青年”,而且针对所有与父母分离的儿童。