Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Department of Behavioral and Community Health, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA.
J Adolesc. 2024 Oct;96(7):1569-1580. doi: 10.1002/jad.12363. Epub 2024 Jun 17.
Parent-child sexual health communication reduces sexual risk behaviors among youth, which in turn lowers the transmission rate of HIV and sexually transmitted infections. Despite being a known protective factor, gender differences persist with mothers being more likely to discuss sexual health with their children than fathers. Although individual characteristics, interpersonal familial factors and societal norms (e.g., communication self-efficacy, parent-child closeness, and cultural and gender norms) are associated with Black parents' likelihood to communicate about sex with their children, the current study seeks to explore which of these factors found among Black mother-child or father-son dyads extend to Black father-daughter dyads and how this phenomenon (i.e., Black father-daughter sexual health communication) relates to family structure.
Seven father-daughter dyads (N = 7) and an additional five daughters (n = 5) in the United States completed individual in-depth semi-structured interviews. Daughters (M = 20.3) and fathers (M = 56.7) were biologically related, majority heterosexual, close, and lived together. Data were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using thematic analysis.
Analysis revealed three themes centering around the role of authoritative parenting, the tactics and skills facilitating sexual health communication, and family structure.
Black father-daughter sexual health communication is facilitated by close father-daughter relationships, non-authoritative parenting styles, and open, supportive, and non-judgmental communication. Fathers can be better supported in knowing how and when best to communicate sexual health messages, and to mitigate the possibly negative impacts on communication of divorce or having multiple children.
亲子性健康沟通可减少青少年的性风险行为,从而降低艾滋病毒和性传播感染的传播率。尽管这是一种已知的保护因素,但性别差异仍然存在,母亲比父亲更有可能与孩子讨论性健康问题。尽管个人特征、人际家庭因素和社会规范(例如,沟通自我效能感、亲子亲密关系以及文化和性别规范)与黑人父母与孩子进行性沟通的可能性相关,但本研究旨在探讨这些因素中的哪些因素存在于黑人母子或父子对子中,并扩展到黑人父女对子中,以及这种现象(即黑人父女性健康沟通)与家庭结构的关系。
在美国,有七个父女对子(N=7)和另外五个女儿(n=5)完成了个体深入的半结构化访谈。女儿(M=20.3)和父亲(M=56.7)具有生物学关系,大多数是异性恋,关系亲密,住在一起。数据逐字转录,并使用主题分析进行分析。
分析揭示了三个主题,围绕着权威型育儿的角色、促进性健康沟通的策略和技巧以及家庭结构。
黑人父女性健康沟通是通过密切的父女关系、非权威型育儿方式以及开放、支持和非评判性的沟通来促进的。父亲可以更好地了解如何以及何时最好传达性健康信息,并减轻离婚或有多个孩子对沟通可能产生的负面影响。