| Literature DB >> 35562691 |
Emmanuelle Gareau1, Karen P Phillips2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For young adults, travel- an accessible and aspirational experience- may be accompanied by high-risk lifestyle behaviors abroad, which in turn, increases the risk of sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections (STBBI). This study aimed to examine sexual and risk behaviors of young Canadian adults both at-home and during international travel.Entities:
Keywords: Public health; Risk factors; Sexual behavior; Sexual health; Sexually transmitted infections; Travel; Young adult
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35562691 PMCID: PMC9106270 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-022-13383-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 4.135
Demographics
| Women ( | Men ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 21.18 (SDa: 2.14) | 21.28 (SD: 2.06) | 21.2 (SD: 2.12) | |
| Heterosexual | 438 (81.0%) | 80 (76.2%) | 518 (80.2%) |
| Other (bisexual, homosexual, pansexual, asexual or other) | 103 (19.0%) | 25 (23.8%) | 128 (19.8%) |
| Caucasian/white | 477 (88.2%) | 87 (82.9%) | 564 (87.3%) |
| Chinese | 24 (4.4%) | 5 (4.8%) | 29 (4.5%) |
| Indigenous/Aboriginal/Native | 19 (3.5%) | 2 (1.9%) | 21 (3.3%) |
| South Asian | 11 (2.0%) | 7 (6.7%) | 18 (2.8%) |
| Arab | 13 (2.4%) | 4 (3.8%) | 17 (2.6%) |
| Southeast Asian | 15 (2.8%) | 1 (1.0%) | 16 (2.5%) |
| Black | 8 (1.5%) | 6 (5.7%) | 14 (2.2%) |
| Latin American | 10 (1.8%) | 3 (2.9%) | 13 (2.0%) |
| Filipino | 7 (1.3%) | 2 (1.9%) | 9 (1.4%) |
| West Asian | 3 (0.6%) | 1 (1.0%) | 4 (0.6%) |
| Japanese | 4 (0.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 4 (0.6%) |
| Other | 9 (1.7%) | 1 (1.0%) | 10 (1.5%) |
| Ontario | 238 (44.0%) | 42 (40.0%) | 280 (43.3%) |
| Quebec | 221 (40.9%) | 47 (44.8%) | 268 (41.5%) |
| British Columbia | 44 (8.1%) | 10 (9.5%) | 54 (8.4%) |
| Other (Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan) | 38 (7.0%) | 6 (5.7%) | 44 (6.8%) |
| Secondary School Diploma | 205 (37.9%) | 36 (34.3%) | 241 (37.3%) |
| College Diploma (including DECb) | 110 (20.3%) | 30 (28.6%) | 140 (21.7%) |
| University Degree (Undergraduate, Masters, PhD or medical degree) | 218 (40.3%) | 39 (37.1%) | 257 (39.8%) |
| Other | 8 (1.5%) | 0 (0%) | 8 (1.2%) |
| Student | 459 (84.8) | 87 (82.9%) | 546 (84.5%) |
| Full or part-time work | 75 (13.9%) | 17 (16.2%) | 92 (14.2%) |
| Other/Unemployed | 7 (1.3%) | 1 (1.0%) | 8 (1.2%) |
aSD: standard deviation; b“Diplôme d’études collégiales”; pre-university diploma equivalent to Grade 12 high school + Year 1 University (Quebec, Canada)
Sexual history
| Women ( | Men ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14 years old or less | 56 (10.4%) | 8 (7.6%) | 64 (9.9%) |
| 15-16 years old | 171 (31.6%) | 33 (31.4%) | 204 (31.6%) |
| 17-19 years old | 264 (48.8%) | 46 (43.8%) | 310 (48.0%) |
| 20 years old or older | 50 (9.2%) | 18 (17.1%) | 68 (10.5%) |
| Condom | 405 (74.9%) | 89 (84.8%) | 494 (76.4%) |
| Oral Contraceptive Pill (OCP) | 350 (64.7%) | 44 (41.9%) | 394 (61%) |
| IUDb | 64 (11.8%) | 14 (13.3%) | 78 (12.1%) |
| Hormonal methods other than OCP | 28 (5.2%) | 5 (4.8%) | 33 (5.1%) |
| None | 83 (15.4%) | 20 (19.0%) | 103 (15.9%) |
| Abstinence | 60 (11.1%) | 11 (10.5%) | 71 (11.0%) |
| 1 | 141 (26.1%) | 21 (20.0%) | 162 (25.1%) |
| 2-5 | 210 (38.8%) | 45 (42.9%) | 255 (39.5%) |
| 6-10 | 106 (19.6%) | 17 (16.2%) | 123 (19.0%) |
| 11 or more | 84 (15.5%) | 22 (21%) | 106 (16.4%) |
| 0 | 19 (3.5%) | 4 (3.8%) | 23 (3.6%) |
| 1 | 312 (57.7%) | 56 (53.3%) | 368 (57.0%) |
| 2-5 | 172 (31.8%) | 33 (31.4%) | 205 (31.7%) |
| 6-10 | 26 (4.8%) | 7 (6.7%) | 33 (5.1%) |
| 11 or more | 12 (2.2%) | 5 (4.8%) | 17 (2.6%) |
| 0 | 253 (46.8%) | 39 (37.1%) | 292 (45.2%) |
| 1-2 | 168 (31.1%) | 31 (29.5%) | 199 (30.8%) |
| 3-5 | 64 (11.8%) | 14 (13.3%) | 78 (12.1%) |
| 6 or more | 56 (10.4%) | 21 (20%) | 77 (11.9%) |
| 88 (16.3%) | 24 (22.9%) | 112 (17.3%) | |
| 44 (8.1%) | 6 (5.7%) | 50 (7.7%) | |
| 241 (44.5%) | 62 (59.0%) | 303 (46.9%) | |
| 44 (8.1%) | 7 (6.7%) | 51 (7.9%) | |
| 155 (28.7%) | 6 (5.7%) | 161 (24.9%) | |
| 30 (5.5%) | |||
| 18 (3.3%) | |||
aOther/write-in responses (not shown) included Plan B, pull-out method or not specified. bIUD- intrauterine device. cMore than one sexual partner per year could include concurrent monogamous relationships (as well as polyamorous relationships), as opposed to respondents who reported having dmultiple sexual partners within the same time period. eSTBBI diagnosis in total population (N = 646): chlamydia (n = 33), genital warts/HPV (n = 8), gonorrhoea (n = 5), genital herpes (n = 4), scabies (n = 3), pubic lice (n = 2), chancroid (n = 1), HIV (n = 1) and syphilis (n = 1)
STBBI precautionary measures at-home
| Women ( | Men ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Use condom for penetrative sex | 409 (75.6%) | 80 (76.2%) | 489 (75.7%) |
| Use condom and/or dental dam for oral sex | 2 (0.37%) | 0 | 2 (0.31%) |
| Ask for partner(s)'s history of STBBI | 327 (60.5%) | 61 (58.1%) | 388 (60.1%) |
| Ask for partner(s) to be screened | 153 (28.3%) | 19 (18.1%) | 172 (26.6%) |
| None | 42 (7.8%) | 14 (13.3%) | 56 (8.7%) |
| Never | 185 (34.2%) | 55 (52.4%) | 240 (37.2%) |
| At least one per year | 224 (41.4%) | 35 (33.3%) | 259 (40.1%) |
| When beginning new relationship/new partner | 149 (27.5%) | 12 (11.4%) | 161 (24.9%) |
| After unprotected sex | 62 (11.5%) | 4 (3.8%) | 66 (10.2%) |
| 106 (19.5%) | 30 (28.6%) | 137 (21.2%) | |
| 11 (2.0%) | 6 (5.7%) | 17 (2.6%) | |
aScreening frequency ‘other’ write in-response not shown
Travel organizations
| Women ( | Men ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arranged by an association/organization | 89 (16.5%) | 19 (18.1%) | 108 (16.7%) |
| Information received about health and safety from the association/organization | 43 (48.3%) | 5 (26.3%) | 48 (44.4%) |
| Information received about sexual health from the association/organization | 12 (13.5%) | 2 (10.5%) | 14 (13.0%) |
aOrganizations were mainly education-related (n = 50, 56.2% for women; n = 9, 47.4% for men), humanitarian/charity/volunteer related (n = 22, 24.7% for women; n = 6, 31.6%), or tourism-related (n = 7, 7.9% of women; n = 4, 21.1% of men)
Sexual activity abroad
| Women | Men | All | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trip Abstinent ( | Trip Sexually Active ( | All ( | Trip Abstinent ( | Trip Sexually Active ( | All ( | Trip Abstinent ( | Trip Sexually Active ( | Total ( | |
| Single | 137 (42.9%) | 65 (29.3%) | 202 (37.3%) | 32 (57.1%) | 26 (53.1%) | 58 (55.2%) | 169 (54.1%) | 91 (33.6%) | 260 (40.2%) |
| In a Romantic Relationship | 162 (50.8%) | 142 (64.0%) | 304 (56.2%) | 22 (39.3%) | 15 (30.6%) | 37 (35.2%) | 184 (49.1%) | 157 (57.9%) | 341 (52.8%) |
| In a Sexual Partnership | 16 (5.0%) | 9 (4.1%) | 25 (4.6%) | 1 (1.8%) | 5 (10.2%) | 6 (5.7%) | 17 (4.5%) | 14 (5.2%) | 31 (4.8%) |
| Married | 2 (0.6%) | 4 (1.8%) | 6 (1.1%) | 1 (1.8%) | 3 (6.1%) | 4 (3.8%) | 3 (0.8%) | 7 (2.6%) | 10 (1.5%) |
| Planned to have sex abroad | 8 (2.5%) | 153 (68.9%) | 161 (29.8%) | 5 (8.9%) | 33 (67.3%) | 38 (36.2%) | 13 (3.5%) | 186 (68.6%) | 199 (30.8%) |
| Brought condoms on trip | 27 (8.5%) | 87 (39.2%) | 114 (21.1%) | 13 (23.2%) | 29 (59.2%) | 42 (40.0%) | 40 (10.7%) | 116 (42.8%) | 156 (21.4%) |
| Usual sexual and/or romantic partner | _ | 143 (64.4%) | _ | _ | 18 (36.7%) | _ | _ | 161 (59.4%) | _ |
| New partnerc | 79 (35.6%) | 31 (63.3%) | 110 (40.6%) | ||||||
a “Other” was indicated for 4 (0.7%) women in response to relationship status. Note: relationship status was not used to categorize sexual partners on trip.bUsual partner- usual romantic partner, usual sexual partner(s). cNew partner-friend(s), other traveler(s), local citizen(s), sex worker(s), other(s); Participants who indicated at least one new partner were categorized in the ‘new partner’ group. Fifteen travelers reported both usual partners as well as new partners during travel
Sexual Risk Behaviors at-Home and Abroad
| Women | Men | All | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trip Abstinent | Trip Sexually Active ( | All Women ( | Trip Abstinent ( | Trip Sexually Active ( | All Men ( | Trip Abstinent ( | Trip Sexually Active ( | Total ( | ||||||||||
| Home | Abroad | Home | Abroad | Home | Abroad | Home | Abroad | Home | Abroad | Home | Abroad | Home | Abroad | Home | Abroad | Home | Abroad | |
| Masturbation | 236 (74.0%) | 81 (25.4%) | 172 (77.5%) | 69 (31.1%) | 408 (75.4%) | 150 (27.7%)** | 53 (94.6%) | 28 (50.0%) | 46 (93.9%) | 27 (55.1%) | 99 (94.3%) | 55 (52.4%)** | 289 (77.1%) | 109 (29.1%) | 218 (80.4%) | 96 (35.4%) | 507 (78.5%) | 205 (31.7%)** |
| Mutual Masturbation- (partnered) | 239 (74.9%) | 0 (0%) | 188 (84.7%) | 130 (58.6%) | 427 (78.9%) | 130 (24.0%)** | 41 (73.2%) | 0 (0%) | 38 (77.6%) | 25 (51.0%) | 79 (75.2%) | 25 (23.8%)** | 280 (74.7%) | 0 (0%) | 226 (83.4%) | 155 (57.2%) | 506 (78.3%) | 155 (24.0%)** |
| Oral Sex | 294 (92.2%) | 1 (0.3%) | 209 (94.1%) | 163 (73.4%) | 503 (93.0%) | 164 (30.3%)** | 52 (92.9%) | 1 (1.8%) | 44 (89.8%) | 38 (77.6%) | 96 (91.4%) | 39 (37.1%)** | 346 (92.3%) | 2 (0.5%) | 253 (93.4%) | 201 (74.2%) | 599 (92.7%) | 203 (31.4%)** |
| Vaginal Sex | 302 (94.7%) | 1 (0.3%) | 211 (95.0%) | 196 (88.3%) | 513 (94.8%) | 197 (36.4%)** | 48 (85.7%) | 0 (0%) | 39 (79.6%) | 32 (65.3%) | 87 (82.9%) | 32 (30.5%)** | 350 (93.3%) | 1 (0.3%) | 250 (92.3%) | 228 (84.1%) | 600 (92.9%) | 229 (35.4%)** |
| Anal Sex | 49 (15.4%) | 0 (0%) | 42 (18.9%) | 15 (6.8%) | 91 (16.8%) | 15 (2.8%)** | 12 (21.4%) | 0 (0%) | 22 (44.9%) | 10 (20.4%) | 34 (32.4%) | 10 (9.5%)** | 61 (16.3%) | 0 (0%) | 64 (23.6%) | 25 (9.2%) | 125 (19.3%) | 25 (3.9%)** |
| Sex Toys | 100 (31.3%) | 2 (0.6%) | 90 (40.5%) | 13 (5.9%) | 190 (35.1%) | 15 (2.8%)** | 10 (17.9%) | 0 (0%) | 11 (22.4%) | 3 (6.1%) | 21 (20.0%) | 3 (2.9%)** | 110 (29.3%) | 2 (0.5%) | 101 (37.3%) | 16 (5.9%) | 211 (32.7%) | 18 (2.8%)** |
| BDSMc | 31 (9.7%) | 0 (0%) | 14 (6.3%) | 5 (2.3%) | 45 (8.3%) | 5 (0.9%)** | 6 (10.7%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (8.2%) | 1 (2.0%) | 10 (9.5%) | 1 (1.0%)* | 37 (9.9%) | 0 (0%) | 18 (6.6%) | 6 (2.2%) | 55 (8.5%) | 6 (0.9%)** |
| N/Ad | 6 (1.9%) | 236 (74.0%) | 2 (0.9%) | 9 (4.1%) | 8 (1.5%) | 245 (45.3%)** | 53 (94.6%) | 28 (50.0%) | 46 (93.9%) | 27 (55.1%) | 99 (94.3%) | 55 (52.4%)** | 6 (1.6%) | 263 (70.1%) | 2 (0.7%) | 10 (3.7%) | 8 (1.2%) | 273 (42.3%)** |
| Everyday | 1 (0.3%) | 50 (15.7%) | 6 (2.7%) | 53 (23.9%) | 7 (1.3%) | 103 (19.0%) | 0 (0%) | 11 (19.6%) | 0 (0%) | 13 (26.5%) | 0 (0%) | 24 (22.9%) | 1 (0.3%) | 61 (16.3%) | 6 (2.2%) | 66 (24.4%) | 7 (1.1%) | 127 (19.7%) |
| 4-5 Times a Week | 5 (1.6%) | 48 (15.0%) | 10 (4.5%) | 48 (21.6%) | 15 (2.8%) | 96 (17.7%) | 3 (4.5%) | 10 (17.9%) | 8 (16.3%) | 10 (20.4%) | 11 (10.5%) | 20 (19.0%) | 8 (2.1%) | 58 (15.5%) | 18 (6.6%) | 58 (21.4%) | 26 (4.0%) | 116 (18.0%) |
| 2-3 Times a Week | 59 (18.5%) | 62 (19.4%) | 55 (24.8%) | 24.3%) | 114 (21.1%) | 116 (21.4%) | 14 (25.0%) | 9 (16.1%) | 16 (32.7%) | 15 (30.6%) | 30 (28.6%) | 24 (22.9%) | 73 (19.5%) | 71 (18.9%) | 71 (26.2%) | 69 (25.5%) | 144 (22.3%) | 140 (21.7%) |
| Once a Week | 110 (34.5%) | 41 (12.9%) | 76 (34.2%) | 29 (13.1%) | 186 (34.4%) | 70 (12.9%) | 16 (28.6%) | 5 (8.9%) | 15 (30.6%) | 2 (4.1%) | 31 (29.5%) | 7 (6.7%) | 126 (33.6%) | 46 (12.3%) | 91 (33.6%) | 31 (11.4%) | 217 (33.6%) | 77 (11.9%) |
| Less than Once a Week | 131 (41.1%) | 37 (11.6%) | 73 (32.9%) | 21 (9.5%) | 204 (37.7%) | 58 (10.7%) | 19 (33.9%) | 3 (5.4%) | 9 (18.4%) | 5 (10.2%) | 28 (26.7%) | 8 (7.6%) | 150 (40.0%) | 40 (10.7%) | 82 (30.3%) | 26 (9.6%) | 232 (35.9%) | 66 (10.2%) |
| Never | 13 (4.1%) | 81 (25.4%) | 2 (0.9%) | 17 (7.7%) | 15 (2.8%) | 98 (18.1%) | 4 (7.1%) | 18 (32.1%) | 1 (2.0%) | 4 (8.2%) | 5 (4.8%) | 22 (21.0%) | 17 (4.5%) | 99 (26.4%) | 3 (1.1%) | 21 (7.7%) | 20 (3.1%) | 120 (18.6%) |
aAll respondents were asked to identify the number of sexual partners abroad. Those who indicated 0 sexual partners were considered ‘trip abstinent’, despite solo-sexual activities and 3 responses of oral/vaginal sex. bMcNemar Test used to evaluate sexual behaviors at-home and abroad in women, men, and the full sample. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.001. Sexual behaviors ‘other’ write in-response not shown. cBondage and discipline, dominance and submission, and sadism and masochism. dN/A response taken as no sexual behaviors practiced. eAlcohol consumption increased abroad in all participants (Wilcoxon, z = −11.341, p < 0.001), women (z = −10.711, p < 0.001) and men (z = −3.830, p < 0.001)
Influence of Partner-Type on Sexual Behaviors Abroad
| Women | Women [new partner] | All Women | Men | Men [new partner] | All Men | All [usual partner] | All [new partner] | TOTAL | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 118 (82.5%) | 35 (44.3%)** | 153 (68.9%) | 15 (83.3%) | 18 (58.1%) | 33 (67.3%) | 133 (82.6%) | 53 (48.2%)** | 186 (68.6%) | |
| 52 (36.4%) | 35 (44.3%) | 87 (39.2%) | 8 (44.4%) | 21 (67.7%) | 29 (59.2%) | 60 (37.3%) | 56 (50.9%)* | 116 (42.8%) | |
| 1 | 139 (97.2%) | 44 (55.7%)** | 183 (82.4%) | 18 (100.0%) | 14 (45.2%)** | 32 (65.3%) | 157 (97.5%) | 58 (52.7%)** | 215 (79.3%) |
| 2-5 | 3 (2.1%)b | 32 (40.5%) | 35 (15.8%) | 0 (0%) | 13 (41.9%) | 13 (26.5%) | 3 (1.9%) | 45 (40.9%) | 48 (17.7%) |
| 6+ | 1 (0.7%)b | 3 (3.8%) | 4 (1.8%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (12.9%) | 4 (8.2%) | 1 (0.6%) | 6 (5.5%) | 8 (3.3%) |
| | 35 (24.5%) | 34 (43.0%)* | 69 (31.1%) | 6 (33.3%)* | 21 (67.7%) | 27 (55.1%) | 41 (25.5%) | 55 (50.0%)** | 96 (35.4%) |
| | 89 (62.2%) | 41 (51.9%) | 130 (58.6%) | 11 (61.1%) | 14 (45.2%) | 25 (51.0%) | 100 (62.1%) | 55 (50.0%)* | 155 (57.2%) |
| | 108 (75.5%) | 55 (69.6%) | 163 (73.4%) | 13 (72.2%) | 25 (80.6%) | 38 (77.6%) | 121 (75.2%) | 80 (72.7%) | 201 (74.2%) |
| | 127 (88.8%) | 69 (87.3%) | 196 (88.3%) | 15 (83.3%) | 17 (54.8%) | 32 (65.3%) | 142 (88.2%) | 86 (78.2%)* | 228 (84.1%) |
| | 4 (2.8%) | 11 (13.9%)* | 15 (6.8%) | 1 (5.6%) | 9 (29.0%) | 10 (20.4%) | 5 (3.1%) | 20 (18.2%)** | 25 (9.2%) |
| | 10 (7.0%) | 3 (3.8%) | 13 (5.9%) | 1 (5.6%) | 2 (6.5%) | 3 (6.1%) | 11 (6.8%) | 5 (4.5%) | 16 (5.9%) |
| | 2 (1.4%) | 3 (3.8%) | 5 (2.3%) | 1 (5.6%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (2.0%) | 11 (6.8%) | 3 (2.7%) | 14 (5.2%) |
| | 33 (23.1%) | 28 (35.4%)* | 61 (27.5%) | 5 (27.8%) | 9 (29.0%) | 14 (28.6%) | 38 (23.6%) | 37 (33.6%)* | 75 (27.7%) |
| | 80 (55.9%) | 63 (79.7%)** | 143 (64.4%) | 9 (50%) | 24 (77.4%)* | 33 (67.3%) | 89 (55.3%) | 87 (79.1%)** | 176 (64.9%) |
| | 2 (1.4%) | 8 (10.1%)* | 10 (4.5%) | 1 (5.6%) | 3 (9.7%) | 4 (8.2%) | 3 (1.9%) | 11 (10%)* | 14 (5.2%) |
| | 0 | 5 (6.3%) | 5 (2.3%) | 1 (5.6%) | 3 (9.7%) | 4 (8.2%) | 1 (0.62%) | 8 (7.3%) | 9 (3.3%) |
aUsual partner = usual romantic partner, usual sexual partner(s), New partner = friend(s), other traveler(s), local citizen(s), sex worker(s), other(s); bAmong women who identified their usual romantic/sexual partners, 4 identified more than one partner. It is unclear whether this was due to prolonged trip duration and represents consecutive, monogamous relationships, or polyamorous/open relationships. These women did not identify these partners as belonging to any of the ‘new partner’ categories. cSexual behaviors ‘other’ write in-response not shown. dBondage and discipline, dominance and submission, and sadism and masochismeAn additional 7 trip-abstinent women (not shown) reported sexual assault during travel.fSTBBI included chancroid (n = 1), chlamydia (n = 4), genital herpes (n = 2), genital warts/HPV (n = 1), HIV (n = 1), scabies (n = 1), syphilis (n = 1); note some respondents indicated more than one type of STBBI. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.001. Test of two proportions used to evaluate plans to have sex abroad, brought condoms on trip, frequency of sex under the influence of alcohol, sexual behaviors and sexual assault. Frequency of condom use during sex and number of sexual partners during trip were analyzed using Mann-Whitney U test, see text for details