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Barriers experienced by emerging adults in discussing their sexuality with parents and health care providers: A mixed-method study.

Sophia I Sánchez, H Jones, Katherine W. Bogen, Tierney K. Lorenz

2023American Journal of Orthopsychiatry11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Qualitative analyses revealed that while embarrassment, shame, and awkwardness were commonly reported barriers to communicating with both parents and providers, participants reported different effects across settings: Parent-related embarrassment was associated with concerns about changing the intimacy of the parental relationship, while provider-related embarrassment was associated with fears of seeming incompetent or eliciting dismissal. These observations were supported by multidimensional scaling and hierarchical cluster analyses, which we used to derive conceptual maps based on quantitative spatial analysis of single-concept statements. These analyses revealed a best-fit solution of eight conceptual groups for barriers to discussing sexuality with health care providers, but only four groups of barriers in discussing with parents. Broadly, our findings reinforce the need to tailor sexual health communication to patient characteristics and settings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

EmbarrassmentHuman sexualityShamePsychologyPsycINFOQualitative researchHealth careReproductive healthSocial psychologyMental healthDevelopmental psychologyMEDLINEMedicinePsychiatryGender studiesPopulationSociologySocial scienceEconomicsEnvironmental healthEconomic growthPolitical scienceLawAdolescent Sexual and Reproductive HealthFemale Genital Mutilation/Cutting IssuesReproductive Health and Contraception
Barriers experienced by emerging adults in discussing their sexuality with parents and health care providers: A mixed-method study. | Litcius