Freeman E W, Rickels K, Huggins G R, Mudd E H, Garcia C R, Dickens H O
Am J Public Health. 1980 Aug;70(8):790-7. doi: 10.2105/ajph.70.8.790.
Information and attitudes about contraception and pregnancy were assessed with a self-administered questionnaire in a sample of urban Black teenagers. Data were obtained from 607 male and female students in high school health classes and a demographically similar group of 123 never-pregnant teenage women in a family planning clinic who had not attended these classes. Males were less likely to recognize the risk of pregnancy, had less information about contraceptives, and fewer attitudes that supported contraceptive use than females who participated in the same shool health classes. More males than females indicated that school classes had been the main source of contraceptive information. Teenage women in the family planning clinic did not differ from the high school females in attitudes about contraceptives, but the school group had somewhat more contraceptive information. The female school group was more likely to have discussed contraception with parents, obtained more contraception information from their mothers, and discussed contraception more with male friends than the teenagers who requested contraceptives at the family planning clinic.
通过一份自填式问卷,对城市黑人青少年样本的避孕和怀孕相关信息及态度进行了评估。数据来自高中健康课程中的607名男女学生,以及计划生育诊所中123名从未怀孕且未参加过这些课程、人口统计学特征相似的青少年女性。与参加同一学校健康课程的女性相比,男性认识到怀孕风险的可能性较小,对避孕措施的了解较少,支持使用避孕措施的态度也较少。表示学校课程是避孕信息主要来源的男性多于女性。计划生育诊所的青少年女性在避孕态度上与高中女生没有差异,但学校组掌握的避孕信息略多。与在计划生育诊所寻求避孕措施的青少年相比,学校的女生组更有可能与父母讨论过避孕问题,从母亲那里获得了更多避孕信息,并且与男性朋友讨论避孕问题的次数更多。