| Literature DB >> 20875121 |
Jiankang Chao1, Yenchin Lin, Michia Ma, Yanchiou Ku, Chinghong Tsai, Mingder Shi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Military conscripts may experience a change in their attitude towards sex at times when sexual urges are at their peak during their physical growth. This study examines the experience, understanding, knowledge and attitudes regarding sexual activity of the military conscripts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20875121 PMCID: PMC2955694 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-577
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Socio-demographic characteristics of the study group in relation to having had sexual intercourse at least once during the previous 12 months.
| Sexual intercourse | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | N | % | None | Have | |||
| N | % | N | % | ||||
| ≦12 years | 578 | 51.3 | 337 | 58.3 | 241 | 41.7 | |
| Over 12 years | 549 | 48.7 | 310 | 56.5 | 239 | 43.5 | |
| Yes | 633 | 56.2 | 349 | 55.1 | 284 | 44.9 | |
| No | 494 | 43.8 | 298 | 60.3 | 196 | 39.7 | |
| ≦20000 | 915 | 81.2 | 552 | 60.3 | 363 | 39.7 | |
| 21001-30000 | 184 | 16.3 | 80 | 43.5 | 104 | 56.5 | |
| 30001-40000 | 16 | 1.4 | 9 | 56.3 | 7 | 43.8 | |
| 0ver 40001 | 12 | 1.1 | 6 | 50.0 | 6 | 50.0 | |
| Technical Science | 551 | 48.9 | 345 | 62.6 | 206 | 37.4 | |
| Commercial Science | 232 | 20.6 | 123 | 53.0 | 109 | 47.0 | |
| Health Science | 28 | 2.5 | 12 | 42.9 | 16 | 57.1 | |
| Others | 316 | 28 | 167 | 52.8 | 149 | 47.2 | |
| No education | 19 | 1.7 | 10 | 52.6 | 9 | 47.4 | |
| Primary school | 238 | 21.1 | 142 | 59.7 | 96 | 40.3 | |
| Junior high school | 367 | 32.6 | 214 | 58.3 | 153 | 41.7 | |
| Senior high school | 363 | 32.2 | 209 | 57.6 | 154 | 42.4 | |
| University | 140 | 12.4 | 72 | 51.4 | 68 | 48.6 | |
| No education | 25 | 2.2 | 10 | 40.0 | 15 | 60.0 | |
| Primary school | 272 | 24.1 | 150 | 55.1 | 122 | 44.9 | |
| Junior high school | 400 | 35.5 | 235 | 58.8 | 165 | 41.3 | |
| Senior high school | 360 | 31.9 | 214 | 59.4 | 146 | 40.6 | |
| University | 70 | 6.2 | 38 | 54.3 | 32 | 45.7 | |
| Yes | 416 | 36.9 | 223 | 53.6 | 193 | 46.4 | |
| No | 711 | 63.1 | 424 | 59.6 | 287 | 40.4 | |
a: using chi-square test; *: P value < 0.05.
Sexual activity during the previous 12 months (n = 1,127)
| Never | Once | 2 ~5 times | Over 5 times | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | % | N | % | N | % | N | % | |
| 1. Dating more than one person | 652 | 57.9 | 103 | 9.1 | 185 | 16.4 | 187 | 16.6 |
| 2. Dating one person | 539 | 47.8 | 99 | 8.8 | 140 | 12.4 | 348 | 30.9 |
| 3. Steady dating relationship | 401 | 35.6 | 303 | 26.9 | 219 | 19.4 | 204 | 18.1 |
| 4. Tender kiss | 385 | 34.2 | 153 | 13.6 | 131 | 11.6 | 458 | 40.6 |
| 5. Embrace and kiss | 436 | 38.7 | 106 | 9.4 | 116 | 10.3 | 469 | 41.6 |
| 6. Deep kissing | 436 | 38.7 | 113 | 10.0 | 121 | 10.7 | 457 | 40.6 |
| 7. Chest stroked by the opposite sex outside the clothes | 549 | 48.7 | 112 | 9.9 | 147 | 13.0 | 319 | 28.3 |
| 8. Chest stroked by the opposite sex inside the clothes | 571 | 50.7 | 106 | 9.4 | 134 | 11.9 | 316 | 28.0 |
| 9. Opposite sex's genital organs stroked outside the clothes | 613 | 54.4 | 115 | 10.2 | 122 | 10.8 | 277 | 24.6 |
| 10. Opposite sex stroked genital organs outside the clothes | 612 | 54.3 | 118 | 10.5 | 119 | 10.6 | 278 | 24.7 |
| 11. Opposite sex's genital organs stroked inside the clothes | 610 | 54.1 | 115 | 10.2 | 115 | 10.2 | 287 | 25.5 |
| 12. Opposite sex stroked genital organs inside the clothes | 615 | 54.6 | 117 | 10.4 | 115 | 10.2 | 280 | 24.8 |
| 13. Oral sex with the opposite sex. | 746 | 66.2 | 107 | 9.5 | 82 | 7.3 | 192 | 17.0 |
| 14. Sexual intercourse with the opposite sex | 647 | 57.4 | 81 | 7.2 | 115 | 10.2 | 284 | 25.2 |
| 15. Oral sex with the same sex | 1042 | 92.5 | 32 | 2.8 | 20 | 1.8 | 33 | 2.9 |
| 16. Sexual intercourse with the same sex | 1048 | 93.0 | 22 | 2.0 | 21 | 1.9 | 36 | 3.2 |
The descriptive statistics of sexual attitudes
| Sexual attitudes items | mean | SD |
|---|---|---|
| Sexual attitudes ( scale 1~4) | ||
| 1. Sex education in school will not cause excessive sexuality. | 2.08 | 0.73 |
| 2. Pre-marital sex is permitted if young couples are very close. | 2.30 | 0.76 |
| 3. Contraceptive knowledge will not result in the pre-marital sexual behavior of youth. | 2.78 | 0.73 |
| 4. Parents should not prevent their children from masturbating. | 2.18 | 0.79 |
| 5. Close behavior in public may be permitted. | 2.45 | 0.80 |
| 6. I can accept trying virtual sex. | 2.19 | 0.77 |
| 7. I can accept one having more than two sexual partners at the same time. | 1.88 | 0.81 |
| 8. If the price is fair, I can accept prostitution. | 1.72 | 0.76 |
| 9. Sex education can cultivate sexual attitudes of respect and responsibility. | 3.28 | 0.72 |
| 10. Pre-marital sex is helpful in adapting to future marriage life. | 2.85 | 0.79 |
SD = standard deviation
Sexual attitude scale: 1 as totally disagree, 2 as disagree, 3 as agree, 4 as totally agree.
Percentage of young adults with correct sexual knowledge
| Sexual Knowledge Descriptive | % |
|---|---|
| 1. Fetus's gender is decided by the sperm. | 60.7 |
| 2. Pregnancy is impossible if the sperm do not enter the vagina. | 65.5 |
| 3. Women in the post-menstrual cycle have reproductive capability. | 72.6 |
| 4. Men less than 16 years old still have reproductive capability. | 68.0 |
| 5. Women in the early period of pregnancy have no menstruation. | 83.4 |
| 6. Sperm is not produced by the penis. | 71.3 |
| 7. Whether pregnancy is achieved or not is related to the wife and husband. | 92.5 |
| 8. Pregnancy is possible if intercourse does not reach a climax. | 90.9 |
| 10. Reproductive ability is unrelated to the size of the penis. | 82.3 |
| 1. Oral contraceptives should not be taken only before every sexual intercourse. | 86.0 |
| 2. The condom is used to prevent sperm from entering the vagina. | 34.0 |
| 3. All contraceptive methods are not 100% effective. | 96.3 |
| 4. Sperm can survive in the vagina about 2~3 days. | 76.1 |
| 5. We can buy oral contraceptives and condoms in the drug store. | 92.1 |
| 6. Pregnancy is possible if intercourse occurs only once. | 82.4 |
| 7. Pregnancy is possible if the female menstrual cycle is irregular, | 67.6 |
| 8. Pregnancy is possible if intercourse occurs during the two weeks before the MC. | 50.3 |
| 1. Women should take a shower during their menstruation period. | 71.4 |
| 2. Masturbation is not harmful. | 40.7 |
| 3. Sperm cannot be transformed into blood and is not a source of power. | 74.9 |
| 4. Nocturnal emissions will not affect health and sexual ability. | 81.8 |
| 5. Consanguineous marriage will lead to a high possibility of a defective fetus. | 81.6 |
| 6. The probability of pregnancy for women with normal sexual intercourse decreases with age, especially after 35 years old. | 85.4 |
| 1. AIDS may be transmitted to anyone, not only among homosexuals. | 90.1 |
| 2. Mothers with HIV will transmit AIDS to the fetus. | 89.4 |
| 3. AIDS will be transmitted by sharing needles. | 94.1 |
| 4. AIDS is not transmitted by speaking with, shaking hands with, hugging an HIV carrier. | 79.4 |
| 5. The probability of transmitting AIDS can be reduced by using a condom. | 92.3 |
| 6. HIV carriers look like normal people. | 86.3 |
Mean score: 23.2 ± 4.0
Association of socio-demographic characteristics and sexual attitudes, sexual knowledge
| Sexual attitudes total score Mean ± SD (median) | Sexual knowledge total score Mean ± SD (median) | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes (N = 633) | 23.68 ± 3.35 (24.0) | 23.21 ± 3.86 (24.0) |
| No (N = 494) | 23.74 ± 3.64 (24.0) | 23.05 ± 4.20 (24.0) |
| P value | ||
| ≦12 years (N = 576) | 23.95 ± 4.00 (24.0) | 21.38 ± 4.14 (23.0) |
| >12 years (N = 551) | 23.45 ± 2.80 (23.0) | 25.00 ± 2.88 (26.0) |
| P value | ||
| No education (N = 19) | 24.63 ± 3.45(25.0) | 19.21 ± 4.42 (20.0) |
| Primary & high school (N = 968) | 23.68 ± 3.56 (24.0) | 22.99 ± 4.00 (24.0) |
| University (N = 140) | 23.66 ± 2.92 (24.0) | 24.83 ± 3.32 (26.0) |
| P value | ||
| Post Hoc | NE < PHS < U | |
| No education (N = 25) | 23.84 ± 3.68(25.0) | 20.64 ± 4.72(21.0) |
| Primary & high school (N = 1032) | 23.70 ± 3.47 (24.0) | 23.12 ± 3.97 (24.0) |
| University (N = 70) | 23.80 ± 3.53 (23.5) | 24.41 ± 3.93 (26.0) |
| P value | ||
| Post Hoc | NE < PHS < U | |
| Technical science (N = 551) | 23.76 ± 3.58 (24.0) | 23.02 ± 3.87 (24.0) |
| Commercial science (N = 232) | 23.60 ± 3.16 (24.0) | 23.95 ± 3.68(25.0) |
| Health science (N = 28) | 23.21 ± 2.13(23.0) | 25.32 ± 3.35 (26.0) |
| Others (N = 316) | 23.74 ± 3.62 (24.0) | 22.58 ± 4.38 (24.0) |
| P value | ||
| Post Hoc | T, O < C < H | |
| Yes (N = 416) | 23.95 ± 3.21 (24.0) | 23.45 ± 3.95 (25.0) |
| No (N = 711) | 23.57 ± 3.62 (24.0) | 22.97 ± 4.04 (24.0) |
| P value |
NE = No education, PHS = Primary school, Junior high school, senior high school, U = University T = Technical science; C = Commercial science; H = Health science; O = Others
Religious belief include any participants who are pertaining to a religion, which include Christian, Buddhism, local religion, Islam, Catholic and other any participants who do not have any religion are nonreligious.
a: using Mann-Whitney U test; b: using K-W H test *: P value < 0.05.
Association of sexual intercourse and sexual attitudes, sexual knowledge, body mass index and demographic data
| intercourse | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| None(N = 647) | Have(N = 480) | P value | |
| Sexual attitudes | 24.66 ± 3.51 | 25.82 ± 3.25 | |
| Sexual knowledge | 22.83 ± 4.06 | 23.69 ± 3.91 | |
| BMI | 23.13 ± 5.28 | 23.34 ± 10.00 | |
| Age | 20.00 ± 2.04 | 20.26 ± 2.18 | |
| Education (years) | 13.33 ± 2.40 | 13.12 ± 2.86 | |
a: using Mann-Whitney test; *: P value < 0.05.