| Literature DB >> 15038827 |
Ida Kangas1, Berit Andersen, Christine A McGarrigle, Lars ØStergaard.
Abstract
AIM: To assess changes in sexual behaviour among students at a high school in Denmark from 1982 to 2001.Entities:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15038827 PMCID: PMC394347 DOI: 10.1186/1478-7954-2-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Popul Health Metr ISSN: 1478-7954
Figure 1Number of detected infections caused by . Data are based on mandatory surveillance system covering infections in the whole country which has a total population of approximately 5 million people.
Demographic data for the three survey years.
| 1982 | 398 | 279 | 70% | 17.7 | 17 |
| 1996 | 330 | 247 | 79% | 18.0 | 18 |
| 2001 | 266 | 193 | 73% | 17.6 | 17 |
| 1982 | 228 | 118 | 52% | 18.0 | 18 |
| 1996 | 169 | 94 | 56% | 18.1 | 18 |
| 2001 | 143 | 77 | 54% | 17.4 | 17 |
Age at first sexual intercourse by sex and survey year.
| Age at first sexual intercourse | N (%) | 95% CI | N (%) | 95% CI | N (%) | 95% CI | Trend* | |
| 11 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (1) | (0–3) | ||||
| 12 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | |||||
| 13 | 3 (3) | (0–6) | 4 (4) | (0–8) | 4 (5) | (0–8) | ||
| 14 | 8 (7) | (3–13) | 6 (6) | (2–10) | 11 (14) | (6–16) | ||
| 15 | 17 (14) | (12–22) | 25 (27) | (20–30) | 15 (20) | (10–20) | ||
| All ages < 16 | 28 (24) | 35 (37) | 31 (40) | χ2 = 7.5 p = 0.023 | ||||
| 12 | 0 (0) | 1 (1) | (0–3) | 2 (1) | (0–5) | |||
| 13 | 15 (5) | (8–22) | 8 (3) | (3–13) | 8 (4) | (3–13) | ||
| 14 | 35 (13) | (25–45) | 20 (8) | (13–27) | 23 (12) | (15–31) | ||
| 15 | 66 (24) | (56–76) | 42 (17) | (34–50) | 48 (25) | (39–57) | ||
| All ages < 16 | 116 (42) | 71 (29) | 81 (42) | χ22 = 11.8 p = 0.003 |
* χ2 tested for trend
Preferred contraceptive method in the three survey years, by sex and whether have a regular partner.
| Contraceptive method | N (%) | 95% CI | N (%) | 95% CI | N (%) | 95% CI | Trend* |
| | |||||||
| Condom | 12 (40) | (7–17) | 19 (61) | (14–24) | 14 (48) | (9–19) | |
| No current personal use | 18 (60) | (13–23) | 12 (39) | (7–17) | 15 (52) | (10–20) | |
| Sexually experienced boys (total) | 30 (100) | 31 (100) | 29 (100) | p = 0.245 | |||
| | |||||||
| Oral contraception | 66 (53) | (55–77) | 70 (69) | (61–79) | 65 (72) | (57–73) | p = 0.005 |
| Condom and oral contraception | 0 (0) | (0–3) | 5 (5) | (1–11) | 9 (10) | (3–15) | p = 0.009 |
| Condom | 1 (1) | 1 (1) | 0 (0) | ||||
| Intrauterine device | 12 (10) | (6–18) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | p = 0.0001 | ||
| Other | 5 (4) | (1–9) | 1 (1) | (0–3) | 3 (3) | (0–6) | p = 0.374 |
| No current personal use | 41 (33) | (31–51) | 24 (24) | (16–32) | 13 (15) | (6–20) | p = 0.008 |
| Sexually experienced girls (total) | 125 (100) | 101 (100) | 90 (100) | ||||
| | |||||||
| Condom | 23 (61) | (17–29) | 29 (91) | (26–32) | 22 (85) | (18–26) | |
| No current personal use | 15 (39) | (9–21) | 3 (9) | (0–6) | 4 (15) | (0–8) | |
| Sexually experienced boys (total) | 38 (100) | 32 (100) | 26 (100) | p = 0.007 | |||
| | |||||||
| Oral contraception | 30 (48) | (22–38) | 27 (35) | (19–35) | 33 (63) | (26–40) | p = 0.005 |
| Condom and oral contraception | 0 (0) | (0–3) | 5 (6) | (1–9) | 0 (0) | (0–3) | p = 0.016 |
| Condom | 0 (0) | 2 (3) | 1 (2) | ||||
| Intrauterine device | 1 (2) | (0–3) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | p = 0.594 | ||
| Other | 6 (10) | (1–11) | 1 (1) | (0–3) | 1 (2) | (0–3) | p = 0.004 |
| No current personal use | 25 (40) | (17–33) | 43 (55) | (34–52) | 17 (33) | (10–24) | p = 0.031 |
| Sexually experienced girls (total) | 62 (100) | 78 (100) | 52 (100) | ||||
* χ2 tested for trend
Impact of wish for protection against sexually transmitted infections on choice of contraceptive method in the three survey years, by sex and whether have a regular partner.
| Protection from STIs | N (%) | 95% CI | N (%) | 95% CI | N (%) | 95% CI | Trend* |
| | |||||||
| Impact on the chosen strategy | 2 (7) | (0–5) | 10 (32) | (5–15) | 8 (27) | (3–13) | |
| No impact on the chosen strategy | 28 (93) | (25–30) | 21 (68) | (16–26) | 22 (73) | (17–27) | |
| Sexually experienced boys (total) | 30 (100) | 31 (100) | 30 (100) | χ2 = 6.40 p = 0.041 | |||
| | |||||||
| Impact on the chosen strategy | 5 (4) | (1–9) | 27 (27) | (18–36) | 20 (21) | (12–28) | |
| No impact on the chosen strategy | 120 (96) | (116–124) | 74 (73) | (65–83) | 76 (79) | (68–84) | |
| Sexually experienced girls (total) | 125 (100) | 101 (100) | 96 (100) | χ2 = 23.53 p < 0.0001 | |||
| | |||||||
| Impact on the chosen strategy | 8 (21) | (3–13) | 23 (72) | (18–28) | 23 (51) | (16–30) | |
| No impact on the chosen strategy | 30 (79) | (25–35) | 9 (28) | (4–14) | 22 (49) | (15–29) | |
| Sexually experienced boys (total) | 38 (100) | 32 (100) | 45 (100) | χ2 = 18.53 p < 0.0001 | |||
| | |||||||
| Impact on the chosen strategy | 6 (10) | (1–11) | 55 (71) | (47–63) | 37 (39) | (28–46) | |
| No impact on the chosen strategy | 56 (90) | (51–61) | 23 (29) | (15–31) | 59 (61) | (50–68) | |
| Sexually experienced girls (total) | 62 (100) | 78 (100) | 96 (100) | χ2 = 53.24 p < 0.0001 | |||
* χ2 tested for trend