Adolescent contraceptive use: comparisons of male and female attitudes and information.
- 1 August 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 70 (8), 790-797
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.70.8.790
Abstract
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.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mother-Daughter Communication about SexFamily Relations, 1980
- Adolescent Pregnancy: A Review of the LiteratureThe Family Coordinator, 1979
- Contraceptive Knowledge: Antecedents and ImplicationsThe Family Coordinator, 1979
- Pregnant adolescents: Some psychosocial factorsPsychosomatics, 1978
- On the psychology of adolescents' use of contraceptivesThe Journal of Sex Research, 1975
- Parents and peers: Socialization agents in the coital behavior of young adults∗The Journal of Sex Research, 1973