Sexual self-efficacy and gender: A review of condom use and sexual negotiation among young men and women in Sub-Saharan Africa
Date
2018
Authors
Closson, Kalysha
Dietrich, Janan J.
Lachowsky, Nathan J.
Nkala, Busiwe
Palmer, Alexis
Cui, Zishan
Beksinska, Mags
Smit, Jennifer A.
Hogg, Robert S.
Gray, Glenda
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
The Journal of Sex Research
Abstract
Sexual self-efficacy (SSE), one’s perceived control of or confidence in the ability to perform a given sexual outcome, predicts sexual behavior; however, important questions remain regarding whether gender modifies observed associations. In a comprehensive review of peer-reviewed HIV-prevention literature focusing on youth (ages 10 to 25) in sub-Saharan Africa, we measured and assessed the influence of SSE on condom use and sexual refusal, overall and by gender. Our results, after reviewing 63 publications, show that SSE is inconsistently measured. Most studies measured condom use self-efficacy (CUSE) (96.8%) and/or sexual refusal self-efficacy (SRSE) (63.5%). On average, young men had higher CUSE than young women, while young women had higher SRSE than young men. While cross-sectional studies reported an association between high SSE and sexual behaviors, this association was not observed in interventions, particularly among young women who face a disproportionate risk of HIV acquisition. In all, 25% of intervention studies demonstrated that fostering CUSE increased condom use among young men only, and one of two studies demonstrated that higher SRSE led to reduced frequency of sexual activity for both men and women. Future research and HIV-prevention interventions must be gender targeted, consider improving CUSE for young men, and move beyond limited individual-level sexual behavior change frameworks.
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Citation
Closson, K., Dietrich, J., Lachowsky, N. J., Nkala, B., Palmer, A., Cui, Z., Beksinska, M., Smit, J. A., Hogg, R. S., Gray, G., Miller, C. L., & Kaida, A. (2018). Sexual self-efficacy and gender: A review of condom use and sexual negotiation among young men and women in Sub-Saharan Africa. The Journal of Sex Research, 55(4–5), 522–539. https://doi.org/10.1080/00224499.2017.1421607