This study examined dating violence perpetration and victimization (physical, psychological, and sexual) and lifetime substance use (alcohol, marijuana, and hard drugs) as longitudinal predictors of adolescents' risky sexual behavior across 1 year; and it determined whether predictors varied across adolescents' gender and ethnicity.
Overall, substance use was a longitudinal predictor of risky sexual behavior across the three ethnic groups (Caucasian, African-American, and Hispanic) involved in the study, with physical dating violence victimization being the only type of dating violence longitudinally predicting risky sexual behavior. Prevention efforts should consider the roles of physical dating violence and substance use in preventing risky sexual behavior. Male and female adolescents of the three ethnic groups from seven public high schools in Texas (N = 882) participated in the study. Participants completed self-report measures of dating violence, lifetime substance use, and risky sexual behavior at baseline and 1-year later, completed a second assessment of their risky sexual behavior. Path analysis demonstrated that greater physical dating violence victimization, lifetime alcohol use, lifetime marijuana use, and age (being older) were all significant predictors of risky sexual behavior at the 1-year follow-up. These results did not vary across gender or the three ethnic groups (Publisher abstract modified)
Downloads
Related Datasets
Similar Publications
- Parent Perceptions of School Relationships: Considerations of Racial-Ethnic Differences and Youth's Peer Victimization
- Many Teachers are Victimized by Students and the School’s Response Matters for Their Well-Being
- Evaluation of Reach & Rise® Program Enhancements to Cognitive Behavioral Mentoring, Technical Report