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ParentAdolescent Communication about Sexuality:

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Estimated half of new HIV infections occur in those 25 years old ... High rates of sexual activity and STDs suggest current parent-adolescent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ParentAdolescent Communication about Sexuality:


1
Parent-Adolescent Communication about Sexuality
  • Do Parents Talk to their Teenagers about Sex?

Kristin Ito, MD, MPH1, Evelyn Foust, MPH2, Ziya
Gizlice, PhD3 1NRSA Primary Care Research
Fellowship, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill 2HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care Branch,
North Carolina Department of Health and Human
Services 3Center for Health Promotion and Disease
Prevention, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill North Carolina State Center for
Health Statistics
2
Parent-Adolescent Communication
Thank you, Adrian. Parenting is a learning
process, and your criticisms help.
Permission to use image from www.cartoonbank.com
3
Why care?
  • Teens identify parents as third most important
    source of information
  • Parents have the most influence on decisions
    about sex
  • 88 teens feel abstinence and avoiding pregnancy
    easier if able to have open conversation with
    parents

Kaiser Family Foundation, National Survey of
Adolescents and Young Adults, 2003. National
Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy. With One
Voice 2004 Americas Adults and Teens Sound Off
About Teen Pregnancy., 2004
4
Adolescent Sexual BehaviorHigh School Students
CDC. Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance, 2003.
5
Risky Adolescent Sexual Behavior
  • Highest prevalence of chlamydia
  • Estimated half of new HIV infections occur in
    those lt25 years old
  • United States has among the highest teen
    pregnancy rates in developed world

6
Why North Carolina?
  • Trend toward more and younger-onset sexual
    intercourse
  • Higher teen pregnancy rate than national average
  • Abstinence-until-marriage sexual education
  • State data available through CHAMP

7
(No Transcript)
8
CHAMP survey
  • Goal of measuring the health characteristics of
    children in North Carolina
  • Follow-back to the 2005 North Carolina Behavior
    Risk Factor Surveillance Survey (BRFSS)

9
BRFSS
  • Measures behavioral risk factors for those 18
    years or older in households
  • Random digit dial telephone survey
  • Ongoing monthly data collection
  • English and Spanish
  • Computer-assisted interviews (CATI)

10
CHAMP survey
  • Respondent asked if had children age 0-17
  • If yes, asked permission to be called back for
    CHAMP
  • Child chosen randomly
  • Parent most knowledgeable about child interviewed
  • 83 completion rate
  • Parents with children age 12-17 analyzed

11
Research Question
  • To determine whether parents in North Carolina
    talk and feel prepared to talk to their teenagers
    about sex and preventing sexually transmitted
    diseases (HIV/STDs).

12
Methods
  • Four questions addressed parent-adolescent
    communication about sex
  • Data from January to September 2005
  • Univariate and bivariate analysis
  • Unweighted data

13
Results
14
Demographics
15
Have you or other members of your family ever
talked with your child about what you expect them
to do or not do when it comes to sex?
chi-square test comparisons by parent gender
and race non-significant
16
Have you discussed with your child about reducing
his/her chances of getting HIV/STDs?
chi-square test comparisons by parent gender
and education non-significant
17
Do you feel well prepared to talk with your child
about reducing his/her chances of getting
HIV/STDs?
chi-square test comparisons by child gender,
race and parent gender non-significant
18
Do you believe your child is sexually active?
53
lt13yo10
chi-square test comparisons by child gender,
parent gender and education non-significant
19
Limitations
  • Response bias
  • Recall bias
  • Social desirability bias
  • Well-educated parents over-represented
  • Fewer male respondents
  • Definition of sex
  • Parent perception
  • Difficult to capture content, frequency, quality,
    non-verbal behaviors

20
Conclusions
  • Majority of parents report discussing
    expectations regarding sexual activity and
    HIV/STD prevention with their adolescents
  • More commonly discuss with females
  • May be racial differences
  • Parents with younger children and less education
    feel less prepared
  • Parents underestimate adolescent sexual activity

21
Implications
  • High rates of sexual activity and STDs suggest
    current parent-adolescent communication
    inadequate
  • Continuing research necessary to define content
    and quality of parent-adolescent communication
  • Interventions to improve parent-adolescent
    communication may be helpful
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