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Release Date: September 21, 1999
Contact: M. Lynne Cooper, PhD
(573) 882-2365
cooperm@missouri.edu
Condom Use in Young Adults Motivated More by Pregnancy than AIDS
Only a small fraction of sexually active young adults use condoms strictly to prevent
AIDS or other sexually transmitted diseases, while the vast majority use them exclusively
or in part to prevent pregnancy, according to researchers at the University of Missouri,
Columbia.
"Efforts to understand and promote condom use typically emphasize disease
prevention motives, including perceived vulnerability to AIDS and other STDs," said
M. Lynne Cooper, PhD, head of the study. "We suspect, however, that such factors are
relatively unimportant among those who use condoms for pregnancy prevention."
"Promoting the view that condoms serve a dual purpose as both contraception and
prophylaxis might encourage more consistent and reliable use," said Cooper.
The researchers surveyed 1,290 adults, ages 17 to 25. The respondents, who were equally
divided between men and women and whites and non-whites, completed questionnaires
assessing how frequently they had sex, their number of sexual partners, and their reasons
for using condoms or other contraceptive techniques. The results of the research appear in
the September issue of Health Psychology.
Nearly 70 percent of the group had used condoms at least once during the past six
months, the researchers found. Among these adults, only 11 percent used condoms strictly
to prevent AIDS and STDs, whereas 41 percent used condoms exclusively to prevent pregnancy
and 48 percent used them to both prevent disease and pregnancy.
"Individuals use condoms to achieve different prevention goals, and these
differences serve as reliable markers for distinct patterns of attitudes, beliefs, and
behaviors related to both condom use and risky sex," said Cooper.
For example, people who use condoms to prevent pregnancy are more likely than other
condom users to be in an exclusive relationship. They engage in the least risky sexual
behavior, and they see themselves as the least vulnerable to disease.
People who use condoms to prevent disease, in contrast, are less likely than the
pregnancy-prevention group and non-users to be in an exclusive relationship and more
likely to engage in risky sexual behavior. Condom use was lowest among this group, and
their negative attitudes toward condoms were "indistinguishable" from those of
nonusers.
Young adults who used condoms for both pregnancy and disease prevention were least
likely of all to be in an exclusive relationship. They were similar to the disease
prevention group in their practice of risky sexual behavior in the past six months, but
they also reported the highest rates of condom use during that same period.
"This group appears to be pragmatic and flexible in their condom use," said
Cooper. "These individuals correctly perceived their recent risk exposure and took
appropriate precautions."
"Considered together, the data suggest that future efforts to understand and
change condom use behaviors will be most successful if the heterogeneous nature of condom
users is taken into account," said Cooper. "Our data point to the potential
utility of tailoring interventions to the unique concerns and lifestyles of subgroups of
condom users and nonusers."
The study was funded by a grant from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism.
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Health Psychology is the official, peer-reviewed research journal
of the Division of Health Psychology (Division 38), American Psychological Association.
For information about the journal, contact David Krantz, PhD, at (301) 295-3273.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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