| Literature DB >> 29554152 |
Filipa de Castro1, Rosalba Rojas-Martínez1, Aremis Villalobos-Hernández1, Betania Allen-Leigh1, Ariela Breverman-Bronstein1, Deborah Lynn Billings2, Patricia Uribe-Zúñiga3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the comprehensive sex education (CSE) coverage and to evaluate a set of indicators related to knowledge, attitudes, and practices associated with the seven components of the CSE framework among Mexican high-school students.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29554152 PMCID: PMC5858848 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193780
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Subtopics students were asked about to measure exposure to comprehensive sex education (CSE) topics in high-school students at any time during schooling, Mexico, 2014.
| Component | Subtopic |
|---|---|
| Gender equity | |
| Relationships (gender roles) | |
| The reproductive system | |
| Puberty | |
| How to prevent pregnancy | |
| How to prevent HIV | |
| How to prevent STIs | |
| Condom use and negotiation (discussion in general) | |
| Correct use of condoms and other contraceptive methods | |
| Reproductive and sexual rights | |
| Access to health services | |
| Where to get condoms and other contraceptive methods | |
| How to overcome barriers to getting condoms or other contraceptive methods | |
| Pleasure related to sex | |
| Physical violence | |
| Sexual violence | |
| Respect for diversity and disability | |
| Respect for people with HIV/AIDS | |
| Respect for sexual orientation | |
| Respect for ethnic origins | |
| How to talk to your partner about using condoms | |
| Values and social relations, recognition of healthy and coercive relationships | |
| How to avoid situations where you could be forced to have sex or to have unprotected sex. | |
Description of outcomes related to comprehensive sex education (CSE) components, Mexico, 2014.
| Indicator | Description |
|---|---|
| Adolescents who have at least two out of six of the following gender-equitable attitudes: 2 questions about whether violence in relationships between men and women is acceptable; 1 question about whether contraception is principally a woman’s responsibility; 1 question about whether men need sex more than women; and giving the same answer (yes to both or no to both) as to whether a woman or a man who has sex before marriage will regret it. Disagreeing with the first 4 questions and giving the same answer to the last two questions was scored as a higher level of gender-equitable attitudes. | |
| To measure recognition of effective contraceptives we asked, Have you heard of (each of the following contraceptive methods was listed): contraceptive pills, contraceptive injections, condoms, IUD, contraceptive patch? We constructed a dichotomous variable classifying adolescents who recognize 3 or more of these methods and adolescents who recognize less than 3. | |
| Adolescents who correctly answered 5 or more out of 9 questions about sexual and reproductive health such as the following: if a condom can be used more than once, if a condom can slip off the penis and get lost in a woman’s body, if condoms protect against HIV/AIDS, against sexually transmitted infections, against pregnancy, how many hours after having sex can emergency contraception be used (24 hours, 120 hours or a month, where 120 hours was the correct answer). | |
| Adolescents who answer correctly that a condom can only be used once | |
| Adolescents who have at least three of the following positive attitudes towards condom use: responding that condoms are a method that is appropriate for adolescents to use in occasional relationships; in stable loving relationships; that they would not be ashamed to buy condoms; that suggesting condom use does not imply a lack of trust and responding that condoms can or should be used during sex after a couple is married. | |
| Adolescents who answered that at least two of the following are sexual and reproductive health rights of adolescents: receiving condoms, receiving contraceptive methods, receiving emergency contraception, having sex only when or if they want to. | |
| Adolescents who report they went to a health facility in the last year seeking any sexual or reproductive health (SRH) service or information | |
| Have positive attitudes towards sexual pleasure | Adolescents who identify at least four positive attitudes towards pleasure, such as agreeing that it is acceptable for adolescents who are not married to have a boyfriend or girlfriend, have dates, kiss, hug, and touch each other, among others. |
| Have positive attitudes towards sexuality | Adolescents who identify at least five positive attitudes towards sexuality such as agreeing that it is acceptable for adolescents to have sex if they love each other or that it is acceptable for two adolescents to have sex before marriage, to see if they are compatible, among others. |
| Adolescents who report suffering any kind of violence perpetrated by a family member over the last year: if you father, mother, brother, sister or another person living in your home insulted you, called you names, made you feel fear, slapped, hit or punched you in the last year. | |
| Adolescents who report suffering any kind of partner or dating violence over the last year including: if a partner, boyfriend or girlfriend insulted you, called you stupid, made fun of you, prohibited you from having friends, spread false rumors abut you, or hurt you physically on purpose, or did something sexual to you when you didn’t want to, in the last year. | |
| Adolescents who report any sexual abuse (if someone has ever touched your genitals or done sexual things to you when you didn’t want to) at any time in their lives | |
| Adolescents who report being bullying victims over the last year, measured by asking how often in the last year has someone done the following to them at school: insulted you or used foul language towards you, made you feel bad or feel fear, slapped, hit or punched you. | |
| Adolescents who report any violence (you felt unsafe at school, you have been called ugly names, threatened, pushed or hit) in school over the last year, because of your gender, skin color, a disability or because they think you have a disability, because of your religion. | |
| Adolescents who report violence in school (you felt unsafe at school, you have been called ugly names, threatened, pushed or hit) because of how they express their gender or how traditionally “masculine” or “feminine” they are in terms of how they look or act, over the last year. | |
| Adolescents who report violence (you felt unsafe at school, you have been called ugly names, threatened, pushed or hit) because of their sexual orientation over the last year. | |
| In adolescents who reported ever having had a girlfriend, boyfriend or partner, equitable decision-making was measured by asking who made the following decisions: when to visit friends; participate in school activities; go to the movies, go out in general, go to parties; whether to skip a class; what type of clothes the adolescent him or herself should use. A higher score was assigned when the adolescent responded that decisions were made by both members of the couple, except for what clothes the adolescent should wear, which was given a higher score (for equitable decisions) if the adolescent decided him or herself. | |
| Adolescents who report feeling sure or very sure they could talk to their partners about using condoms | |
| Adolescents who report feeling sure or very sure they could say they don’t want to have sex without a condom | |
| Adolescents who report feeling sure or very sure that they could convince their partner to use a condom | |
| Adolescents who report talking to their partners about contraceptive use before or during their first sexual encounter. |
Fig 1Conceptual framweork of the association between the IPPF framework, CSE components and sexual health outcomes.
Population characteristics by gender.
Mexico 2014.
| Male | Female | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15 to 16 | 55.3 [50.4,60.0] | 54.0 [49.1,58.8] | 54.6 [50.3,58.8] |
| 17 to 18 | 44.7 [40.0,49.6] | 46.0 [41.2,50.9] | 45.4 [41.2,49.7] |
| Single | 96.1 [95.0,96.9] | 97.3 [96.5,97.9] | 96.7 [96.1,97.2] |
| Married/cohabitation | 3.6 [2.8,4.7] | 2.4 [1.8,3.1] | 3.0 [2.5,3.6] |
| Separated/divorced/widowed | 0.3 [0.1,0.7] | 0.3 [0.1,0.8] | 0.3 [0.2,0.6] |
| First year | 36.1 [31.9,40.5] | 30.4 [25.3,36.0] | 33.2 [29.0,37.6] |
| Second year | 33.5 [30.0,37.1] | 33.9 [30.0,38.0] | 33.7 [30.6,36.9] |
| Third year | 30.4 [26.9,34.1] | 35.7 [30.4,41.3] | 33.2 [29.4,37.1] |
| Public | 83.6 [80.3,86.4] | 78.9 [74.6,82.6] | 81.1 [77.8,84.1] |
| Private | 16.4 [13.6,19.7] | 21.1 [17.4,25.4] | 18.9 [15.9,22.2] |
| Urban | 98.3 [87.8,99.8] | 98.2 [87.4,99.8] | 98.3 [87.6,99.8] |
| Rural | 1.7 [0.2,12.2] | 1.8 [0.2,12.6] | 1.7 [0.2,12.4] |
Distribution of Comprehensive Sexual Education coverage by gender, Mexico 2014.
| Male | Female | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender equity | 88.3 [86.6,89.8] | 92.2 [90.8,93.4] | 90.3 [89.2,91.3] |
| Relationships (how boys should treat girls and vice versa) | 87.5 [86.0,88.9] | 88.4 [86.5,90.0] | 87.9 [86.7,89.1] |
| Adequate use of condoms | 95.7 [94.8,96.5] | 94.6 [93.6,95.4] | 95.1 [94.3,95.8] |
| Correct use of condoms or other contraceptive methods | 91.2 [89.5,92.7] | 89.4 [87.8,90.8] | 90.3 [88.9,91.4] |
| The reproductive system (where the eggs and sperm are formed and how pregnancy occurs) | 97.6 [96.8,98.3] | 97.7 [97.0,98.2] | 97.7 [97.1,98.1] |
| Puberty (the way children’s bodies change during adolescence) | 93.9 [92.6,95.1] | 95.1 [93.4,96.4] | 94.6 [93.2,95.7] |
| How to prevent pregnancy | 95.8 [94.9,96.5] | 97.9 [97.2,98.5] | 96.9 [96.4,97.4] |
| How to prevent HIV | 97.2 [96.0,98.0] | 97.3 [96.6,97.8] | 97.2 [96.7,97.7] |
| How to prevent sexually transmitted infections | 97.6 [96.4,98.4] | 97.8 [97.0,98.3] | 97.7 [97.1,98.1] |
| Implications of drug and alcohol use | 87.8 [86.0,89.3] | 91.6 [90.1,92.9] | 89.8 [88.6,90.8] |
| Reproductive and sexual rights | 69.6 [66.5,72.6] | 67.6 [64.4,70.7] | 68.6 [65.8,71.2] |
| Access to health services | 66.8 [64.6,68.9] | 69.4 [67.0,71.6] | 68.1 [66.1,70.1] |
| Where to get condoms or other contraceptive methods | 81.8 [79.1,84.2] | 80.8 [77.9,83.4] | 81.3 [79.1,83.3] |
| How to overcome barriers to get condoms or other contraceptive methods | 47.3 [43.8,50.9] | 42.1 [38.4,45.8] | 44.6 [41.5,47.7] |
| Pleasure (sex should be enjoyable and not forced, sexuality is part of the life of each person, acceptance of masturbation) | 69.7 [66.7,72.5] | 70.4 [67.8,72.9] | 70.1 [67.9,72.2] |
| Physical violence | 84.0 [81.1,86.6] | 89.0 [87.3,90.6] | 86.6 [84.8,88.3] |
| Sexual violence | 76.2 [73.4,78.9] | 80.1 [77.6,82.4] | 78.3 [75.9,80.4] |
| Respect for diversity and disability | 70.7 [67.2,73.8] | 74.3 [72.1,76.4] | 72.6 [70.2,74.8] |
| Respect for people with HIV/AIDS | 66.1 [63.3,68.4] | 70.4 [67.1,73.5] | 68.3 [65.9,70.6] |
| Respect for sexual orientation | 66.3 [63.8,68.7] | 68.7 [66.5,70.8] | 67.6 [65.5,69.5] |
| Respect for ethnic origins | 66.5 [63.5,69.3] | 67.0 [64.3,69.7] | 66.8 [64.4,69.1] |
| How to talk to your partner about using condoms | 66.5 [63.8,69.1] | 63.4 [60.1,66.6] | 64.9 [62.0,67.7] |
| Values and social relations, recognition of healthy and coercive relationships | 61.7 [58.2,65.0] | 61.1 [57.7,64.4] | 61.4 [58.4,64.2] |
| How to avoid situations where you could be forced to have sex or to have unprotected sex | 69.8 [66.7,72.6] | 73.6 [70.4,76.5] | 71.7 [68.9,74.3] |
* Significant at p <0.05. Difference between male and female.
Distribution of outcomes related to CSE components by gender, México 2014.
| Male | Female | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Have at least two out of six gender-equitable attitudes | 45.2 [42.4,48.1] | 46.6 [43.8,49.5] | 46.0 [43.8,48.1] |
| Recognize at least three out of five effective contraceptives | 95.8 [94.4,96.8] | 98.3 [97.1,99.0] | 97.1 [96.2,97.8] |
| Have correct knowledge at least five out of nine of the topics about sexual and reproductive health | 88.8 [86.4,90.9] | 83.4 [81.5,85.2] | 86.1 [84.3,87.8] |
| Know that condoms can only be used once | 88.3 [86.3,90.1] | 75.2 [73.5,76.8] | 81.5 [80.1,82.9] |
| Have positive attitudes towards condoms | 85.4 [83.7,87.0] | 84.4 [81.2,87.1] | 84.9 [83.0,86.7] |
| Know at least two out of four of their sexual and reproductive health rights | 45.1 [41.3,49.0] | 46.8 [43.1,50.4] | 46.0 [42.5,49.5] |
| Sought sexual and reproductive health counseling | 48.9 [45.0,52.9] | 45.8 [42.6,49.0] | 47.3 [44.4,50.2] |
| Have positive attitudes towards sexuality | 64.8 [61.7,67.7] | 55.7 [51.6,59.6] | 60.1 [57.3,62.9] |
| Have positive attitudes towards pleasure | 76.8 [73.2,80.1] | 68.0 [63.9,72.0] | 73.3 [70.7,75.7] |
| Suffered family violence over the last year | 13.9 [12.4,15.5] | 19.4 [17.1,21.8] | 16.7 [15.2,18.4] |
| Suffered dating violence over the last year | 22.3 [20.2,24.4] | 25.3 [22.9,27.9] | 23.9 [22.3,25.4] |
| Suffered sexual abuse (in their lifetime) | 8.4 [7.1,9.8] | 9.0 [7.5,10.7] | 8.7 [7.7,9.8] |
| Suffered bullying at school over the last year | 52.8 [50.3,55.3] | 43.5 [40.5,46.4] | 48.0 [45.7,50.3] |
| During the last year, suffered bullying because of: | |||
| The color of their skin, disability, or religion | 39.6 [36.9,42.3] | 29.3 [26.3,32.5] | 34.3 [31.9,36.7] |
| The way they express their gender | 24.3 [21.7,27.2] | 23.4 [21.4,25.6] | 23.9 [22.2,25.6] |
| Homophobic bullying | 33.4 [30.9,35.9] | 19.2 [17.1,21.6] | 26.0 [24.5,27.7] |
| Make equitable decisions in their relationship | 90.3 [87.3,92.7] | 95.0 [91.5,97.1] | 92.3 [90.3,93.9] |
| Can talk about using condoms with their partner | 65.2 [61.6,68.7] | 69.4 [66.9,71.8] | 67.4 [65.0,69.7] |
| Can say they don’t want to have sex unless their partner uses a condom | 56.8 [52.3,61.2] | 76.6 [73.8,79.2] | 67.1 [63.8,70.3] |
| Say they could convince their partner to use condoms | 54.9 [50.1,59.6] | 50.9 [46.9,54.9] | 52.9 [49.5,56.2] |
| Negotiated condom use in their first sexual encounter | 19.1 [17.2,21.2] | 19.7 [17.6,21.9] | 19.4 [17.9,21.0] |
* Significant at p <0.05. Difference between male and female.
Association between sexual and reproductive health outcomes and CSE coverage according to the IPPF framework. Mexico 2014.
| OR [95% CI] | P value | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender-equitable attitudes | 1.00 [0.75,1.34] | 0.982 |
| Recognize at least 3 out of five effective contraceptives | 4.10 [2.93,5.75] | <0.001 |
| Have correct knowledge on more than half of the topics about sexual and reproductive health | 1.67 [1.29,2.16] | <0.001 |
| Know that condoms can only be used once | 1.72 [1.40,2.12] | <0.001 |
| Have positive attitudes towards condoms | 1.45 [1.17,1.81] | <0.001 |
| Know at least half their sexual and reproductive health rights | 1.13 [0.96,1.32] | 0.132 |
| Sought sexual and reproductive health counseling | 2.17 [1.91,2.46] | <0.001 |
| Have positive attitudes towards sexuality | 1.19 [1.02,1.38] | 0.026 |
| Have positive attitudes towards pleasure | 1.05 [0.80,1.39] | 0.698 |
| Suffered family violence during the last year | 0.95 [0.79,1.15] | 0.607 |
| Suffered dating violence during the last year | 0.94 [0.76,1.16] | 0.556 |
| Suffered sexual abuse (in their lifetime) | 1.00 [0.76,1.31] | 0.989 |
| Suffered bullying at school over the last year | 0.84 [0.70,1.01] | 0.061 |
| During the last year, suffered bullying because of: | ||
| The color of their skin, a disability, or religion | 0.80 [0.67,0.96] | 0.015 |
| The way they express their gender | 0.82 [0.66,1.02] | 0.079 |
| Homophobic bullying | 0.89 [0.73,1.07] | 0.202 |
| Make more than half of the decisions in their relationship | 1.14 [0.60,2.17] | 0.689 |
| Can talk about using condoms with their partner | 1.02 [0.88,1.19] | 0.786 |
| Can say they don't want to have sex unless their partner uses a condom | 1.16 [0.99,1.37] | 0.072 |
| Say they could convince their partner to use condoms | 1.20 [1.05,1.36] | 0.008 |
| Negotiated condom use in their first sexual encounter | 1.08 [0.92,1.28] | 0.338 |
A: IPPF. IPPF Framework for Comprehensive Sexuality Education. 2010.
B: Adjusted for age and sex.