1. Violence Exposure and Sexual Risk Behaviors for African American Adolescent Girls: The Protective Role of Natural Mentorship and Organizational Religious Involvement.
- Author
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Hope MO, Lee DB, Hsieh HF, Hurd NM, Sparks HL, and Zimmerman MA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Michigan, Resilience, Psychological, Risk-Taking, Violence, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Black or African American psychology, Exposure to Violence psychology, Mentors psychology, Religion and Psychology, Sexual Behavior psychology
- Abstract
African American adolescent girls are at increased risk of being exposed to community violence and being diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection. Fewer studies, however, have examined the protective roles of natural mentorship and organizational religious involvement as potential moderators that could lessen the effects of violence exposure on health risk behavior. Data from 273 African American ninth grade girls were used to test hypothesized independent and moderated-moderation models. Results suggest that natural mentorship and religious involvement were protective for girls who reported at least one mentor and moderate to high levels of religious involvement. Our findings may be relevant for community stakeholders and organizations that directly interact with religious institutions and community programs that focus on outreach to African American adolescent girls., (© 2019 Society for Community Research and Action.)
- Published
- 2019
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