Evans B A, McCormack S M, Kell P D, Parry J V, Bond R A, MacRae K D
Department of Genitourinary Medicine, Charing Cross Hospital, London, UK.
Genitourin Med. 1995 Oct;71(5):286-90. doi: 10.1136/sti.71.5.286.
To measure changes in female sexual behaviour, including condom use, and their relationship with the incidence of sexually transmitted and other genital diseases in women during the decade 1982-92.
A prospective series of cross-sectional surveys of sexual behaviour reported by a standardised self-administered questionnaire in new patients who presented for screening and diagnosis.
A genitourinary medicine clinic in West London.
4089 consecutive newly attending patients who completed sexual behaviour questionnaires during 1982, 1987, 1989 and 1992.
Trends in socio-demographic status, sexual behaviour, condom-use, sexually transmitted diseases and other genital infections diagnosed by routine clinical and laboratory methods.
Women reported significantly increasing condom use (from 3.6% to 20.7%) and decreasing oral contraception (from 51.2% to 40.1%), but the proportion who used no contraception (23.6% to 24.7%) and the proportion who had never been pregnant (58.3% to 59.9%) remained similar. Numbers of sexual partners in the preceding year decreased (p < 0.001) and an increasing proportion of women practised oral intercourse (p < 0.001). During the same period, there was a progressive decline (p < 0.001) in the incidence of gonorrhoea, chlamydial infection and trichomoniasis by approximately two-thirds. However, the incidence of vaginal candidosis (p < 0.001), bacterial vaginosis (p < 0.001) and genital warts (p < 0.01) increased.
Increasing use of condoms for vaginal intercourse with both regular and non-regular partners has been associated with a decrease in the incidence of gonorrhoea, chlamydial infection and trichomoniasis. There was also an increase in the practice of fellatio and a change in the spectrum of STD and other genital infections with little net reduction in morbidity. HIV infection showed no evidence of heterosexual spread.
评估1982年至1992年这十年间女性性行为的变化,包括避孕套使用情况,以及这些变化与女性性传播疾病和其他生殖器疾病发病率之间的关系。
采用标准化的自填式问卷,对前来筛查和诊断的新患者报告的性行为进行前瞻性系列横断面调查。
伦敦西部的一家泌尿生殖医学诊所。
1982年、1987年、1989年和1992年连续4089名新就诊并完成性行为问卷的患者。
通过常规临床和实验室方法诊断的社会人口统计学状况、性行为、避孕套使用、性传播疾病和其他生殖器感染的趋势。
女性报告避孕套使用显著增加(从3.6%增至20.7%),口服避孕药使用减少(从51.2%降至40.1%),但未采取避孕措施的比例(从23.6%增至24.7%)以及从未怀孕的比例(从58.3%增至59.9%)保持相似。前一年性伴侣数量减少(p<0.001),进行口交的女性比例增加(p<0.001)。同期,淋病、衣原体感染和滴虫病的发病率逐渐下降(p<0.001),约下降三分之二。然而,阴道念珠菌病(p<0.001)、细菌性阴道病(p<0.001)和尖锐湿疣(p<0.01)的发病率上升。
与固定和非固定性伴侣进行阴道性交时避孕套使用的增加与淋病、衣原体感染和滴虫病发病率的降低有关。口交行为也有所增加,性传播疾病和其他生殖器感染谱发生变化,但发病率净降低幅度不大。未发现艾滋病毒感染有异性传播的迹象。