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      Patterns of Sexual Experience Among Urban Latino and African American Ninth Grade Students.

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          Abstract

          This analysis assessed patterns of sexual experience, the order in which behaviors were initiated, and associated factors, among Latino and African American ninth grade students (average age 15.2) who self-administered audio-computer-assisted surveys on netbooks in classes at 10 Los Angeles-area public high schools. Lifetime experiences with vaginal and oral sex were most common (19% and 16%, respectively); fewer reported anal sex (6%). Of the 23% reporting any sex, 91% fell into four categories: 36% reporting both oral and vaginal sex; 23% vaginal only; 18% all three; and 13% oral only. Most sexually experienced students (88%) initiated with vaginal or oral sex (46% vaginal, 33% oral, 9% both same day). No dominant pathway of sexual onset emerged for those reporting all three types of sex. We found no evidence that oral or anal sex substituted for or delayed vaginal sex. Males, those with a current partner, and those reporting multiple partners were more likely than others to report all three sexual behaviors versus vaginal only (odds ratios [ORs] 2.0, 1.5, 3.0; p = .02, .06, < .01, respectively). Although vaginal intercourse dominated their early sexual behavior, one-fifth of sexually experienced students reported anal intercourse, highlighting the need for specific prevention messages surrounding this higher-risk behavior.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Sex Res
          Journal of sex research
          Informa UK Limited
          1559-8519
          0022-4499
          May 3 2016
          : 54
          : 4-5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] a Department of Mathematics and Statistics , California State University , Chico.
          [2 ] b Los Angeles County Department of Public Health , Division of HIV and STD Programs.
          [3 ] c Institute for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention , University of Southern California.
          [4 ] d Department of Biostatistics, Fielding School of Public Health , University of California at Los Angeles.
          Article
          10.1080/00224499.2016.1164800
          27135138
          8d57357b-d590-45bf-95b2-2200483fd19b
          History

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