| Literature DB >> 28841895 |
Chunyan Li1, Zixi Cheng2, Taiwen Wu3, Xiao Liang4, Junjian Gaoshan5, Lihe Li4, Ping Hong4, Kun Tang6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A growing prevalence of unexpected pregnancies and younger age of sexual debut is observed among Chinese young people, while they lack formal sexuality education from schools and parents. It is necessary to measure their knowledge level of sexual and reproductive health, and how such knowledge associates with their sexual behaviors and reproductive health outcomes, which would shed light on the effectiveness of sexuality education in China.Entities:
Keywords: College students; Sexual behavior; Sexual knowledge; Sexuality education
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28841895 PMCID: PMC5574133 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-017-0368-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Items of SRH quiz from the survey questionnairea
| Dimension | Items (True or False) |
|---|---|
| 1. Contraceptive Use | 1.1 Withdrawal is an effective method of preventing pregnancy. |
| 1.2 Using condoms could 99.9% protect women from getting pregnant. | |
| 1.3 Only married women could use Intra-Uterine Device (IUD). | |
| 2. HIV/AIDS | 2.1 A person can get HIV by sharing drinking bottles or utensils with someone who lives with HIV. |
| 2.2 All pregnant women infected with HIV will have babies born with HIV. | |
| 3. Abortion/Pregnancy | 3.1 Painless surgical abortion is safer than a regular surgical abortionb. |
| 3.2 A woman can get pregnant once she has sexual intercourse with a man. | |
| 4. Masturbation | 4.1 Masturbation will damage one’s health. |
aAll statements were in Chinese (Mandarin) in the original questionnaire
bIn China, due to commercial advertisement (especially from private clinics/hospitals), painless abortion is portrayed as a safer and convenient approach compared with traditional abortion, while actually the health outcomes of the two approaches are similar. These advertisements make some young people wrongly believe that unplanned pregnancy is not a big problem since there is such a ‘easy’ way to solve it, which then leads to a more careless attitude toward safe sex
Basic social and demographic characteristics of the study population by sex
| Variables | Male | Female | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | % | n | % | n | % | |
| 7118 | 39 | 10,848 | 62 | 17,966 | 100 | |
| Age | ||||||
| ≤ 19 | 1879 | 26 | 3621 | 33 | 5500 | 31 |
| 20 ~ 21 | 4074 | 57 | 6023 | 56 | 10,097 | 56 |
| ≥ 22 | 1165 | 16 | 1204 | 11 | 2369 | 13 |
| Monthly expenditure | ||||||
| < 1000 | 3149 | 44 | 5729 | 53 | 8878 | 49 |
| 1000 ~ 2000 | 3367 | 47 | 4375 | 40 | 7742 | 43 |
| > 2000 | 602 | 8 | 744 | 7 | 1346 | 7 |
| Alcohol | ||||||
| non-drinker | 922 | 13 | 4435 | 41 | 5357 | 30 |
| occasional drinker | 3620 | 51 | 5642 | 52 | 9262 | 52 |
| infrequent drinker | 2235 | 31 | 700 | 6 | 2935 | 16 |
| frequent drinker | 341 | 5 | 71 | 1 | 412 | 2 |
| Tobacco | ||||||
| never | 5724 | 80 | 10,655 | 98 | 16,379 | 91 |
| 1 ~ 10cigarretes/day | 1106 | 16 | 161 | 1 | 1267 | 70 |
| > 10cigarretes/day | 288 | 4 | 32 | 0 | 320 | 2 |
| Hometown | ||||||
| urban | 2923 | 41 | 4203 | 39 | 7126 | 40 |
| suburban | 2122 | 30 | 3472 | 32 | 5594 | 31 |
| rural | 2073 | 29 | 3173 | 29 | 5246 | 29 |
| Family Type | ||||||
| nuclear/extended family | 6351 | 89 | 9729 | 90 | 16,080 | 90 |
| other | 767 | 11 | 1119 | 10 | 1886 | 10 |
| Parents’ Education | ||||||
| primary school and be | 740 | 10 | 1115 | 10 | 1855 | 10 |
| middle school | 2174 | 31 | 3693 | 34 | 5867 | 33 |
| high school | 2243 | 32 | 3474 | 32 | 5717 | 32 |
| vocational school and | 1961 | 28 | 2566 | 24 | 4527 | 25 |
| Sexual Orientation | ||||||
| heterosexual | 6428 | 90 | 9660 | 89 | 16,088 | 90 |
| homosexual | 291 | 4 | 158 | 1 | 449 | 2 |
| bisexual | 277 | 4 | 634 | 6 | 911 | 5 |
| not sure | 122 | 2 | 396 | 4 | 518 | 3 |
Fig. 1Distribution of schooling stages when students received sexuality education
Fig. 2Average SRH scores and 95%C.I. by experience of school-based sexuality education
The OR of having a certain kind of sexual behavior associated with 1-score increased in SRH knowledge by sex
| Behaviors | Male | Female | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR | 95% C.I. | OR | 95% C.I. | |
|
| ||||
| sex debut before the time of survey | 1.14* | (1.08, 1.19) | 1.24* | (1.18,1.30) |
|
| ||||
| 1.First sex partner is non-intimate | 0.94 | (0.85, 1.05) | 0.93 | (0.80, 1.09) |
| 2.No contraception in the last sex | 0.87* | (0.79, 0.96) | 0.93 | (0.82, 1.05) |
| 3.No contraception in most sex | 0.82* | (0.69, 0.96) | 0.82 | (0.64, 1.05) |
| 4. Ever pregnancy | 0.87* | (0.77, 0.98) | 0.82* | (0.72, 0.94) |
| 5.Ever abortion | 0.83* | (0.73, 0.94) | 0.84* | (0.73, 0.96) |
Note: *p < 0.05. Here adjusted for age, monthly expenditure, alcohol use, tobacco use, hometown, family structure, parents’ education and sexual orientation
Linear regression coefficients assessing the association between SRH knowledge and sexual behavior by sex
| Male | Female | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Age at sex debut | 0.28 | <0.001 | 0.02 | 0.566 |
| Total number of past sex partners | −0.04 | 0.001 | −0.01 | 0.339 |
Note: Adjusted for age, monthly expenditure, alcohol use, tobacco use, hometown, family structure, parents’ education and sexual orientation