1. Sexual self-concept and sexual self-efficacy in adolescents: a possible clue to promoting sexual health?
- Author
-
Rostosky, Sharon Scales, Dekhtyar, Olga, Cupp, Pamela K., and Anderman, Eric M.
- Subjects
Self-perception -- Evaluation ,Sex differences (Psychology) -- Evaluation ,Teenagers -- Sexual behavior ,Teenagers -- Demographic aspects ,Health ,Psychology and mental health ,Social sciences - Abstract
This study examined the associations between sexual self-concept (sexual esteem and sexual anxiety) and sexual self-efficacy (situational and resistive) in a sample of 388 high school students (59% Caucasian, 28% African American). Males reported lower sexual esteem and lower sexual self-efficacy than females. Males and African Americans reported higher levels of sexual anxiety and lower levels of resistive self-efficacy than females and Caucasians. In regression models, higher sexual self-esteem uniquely predicted higher sexual self-efficacy scores, even after controlling for demographic variables, knowledge of sexual risk, and previous coital experience. In post hoc analyses, sexual self-esteem mediated the relation between knowledge of sexual risk and both types of sexual self-efficacy. Results suggest the need for interventions to promote male sexual self-efficacy and sexual esteem and the need for longitudinal research that explicates models of sexual health in adolescence., Research on adolescent sexual behavior predominantly has focused on sexual risk taking behaviors in efforts to reduce unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs; e.g., Capaldi, Stoolmiller, Clark, & Owen, [...]
- Published
- 2008