Chapter 12 Sexuality During Childhood and Adolescence Infant sexuality • Capacity for sexual response present from birth • Infants engage in self-pleasuring activity – Pelvic.

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Transcript Chapter 12 Sexuality During Childhood and Adolescence Infant sexuality • Capacity for sexual response present from birth • Infants engage in self-pleasuring activity – Pelvic.

Chapter 12
Sexuality During Childhood and
Adolescence
Infant sexuality
• Capacity for sexual response present from birth
• Infants engage in self-pleasuring activity
– Pelvic thrusting, rubbing genital area against an object
(doll, pillow, etc.)
• In some cases, infants have been observed to
experience what appears to be orgasm
• Unable to differentiate sexual from sensual pleasure
– Many natural everyday activities, breast-feeding, bathing,
diapering, involve pleasurable tactile sensation
Childhood sexuality
• Normative behavior not well studied
– Research limited by political squeamishness over what
“might be interpreted as exploiting children or introducing
sexual ideas to them”
– Difficult to get funding or approval for research on
childhood sexuality
– Much of what we know about childhood sexuality relies
on recollections of adults about their childhoods
• Sexual behavior is normal part of development
– Important to remember that adults tend to interpret
childhood experiences in terms of the meanings that
adults attached to them--to the child, it’s not
“masturbation w/the goal of climax;” it’s just pleasurable
self-touching
Childhood sexuality
(cont.)
• Masturbation (rhythmic genital manipulation; not just
rubbing) starts at 2-3 years
– Important for parents to express acceptance and
reinforce idea of privacy that most kids already
understand
• Sex play starts 4-7 years
– Curiosity about sexual parts, sexual behaviors
• 5-7 year olds begin to enact marriage
(heterosexual)scripts
– Ex: playing house
Childhood sexuality
(cont.)
• Emergence of homosociality 8-9 years
– boys and girls play separately, though may have romantic
interest in other sex
– Interest in reproduction and sexuality is high
• Interest in bodily changes starts at 10-11
– May be self-conscious about their bodies
– Separation from other sex is still common
– Children of this age often strongly protest suggestions of
romantic interest in other sex
– Sex play w/children of same sex is common-- may be a
transition to heterosexual orientation or may reflect
homosexual or bisexual orientation
• Important for parents to avoid responding negatively or labeling the
activity according to adult labels of sexual orientation
12-A Discussion question:
Assume that you are a parent of a 7-year-old and
that one day you find your child playing doctor
with a playmate of the same age of the other sex.
Both have lowered their pants, and they seem to
be involved in visually exploring each other’s
bodies. How would you respond? Would you
react differently according to the sex of your
child? What about if the other child was of the
same sex as your child?
Physical Changes of Adolescence
• Puberty: period of rapid physical changes in
early adolescence during which the
reproductive organs mature
– onset between 8 to 14 years; 2 years earlier in
girls
– triggered by release of pituitary gland hormones
called gonadotropins
• Chemically identical in males and females
• In males, cause testes to increase testosterone
production
• In females, cause ovaries to increase estrogen levels
Physical changes during puberty
• Primary sex characteristics: physical
characteristics in genital development that indicate
sexual maturity
– females:
•
•
•
•
•
thicker vaginal walls
larger uterus
enlarged labia
vaginal secretions
menarche around age 12 to 13; age has fallen
– males:
• larger prostate, penis, seminal vesicles, and testes
• 1st ejaculation around 13
Changes in age of puberty onset in girls
• From 1840 to 1960, the average age of menarche fell
sharply from 17 to 13 years.
– Thought to be due to improved health and nutrition
• Over the past 40 years, average age of menarche has
declined slightly and is now at 12.3 years.
• Ethnic differences exist in age at menarche (see Table)
• Average age of onset of breast development was 11.5
years in 1970; by 1997, age was < 10 for Caucasian girls
and <9 for African-American girls
Table 12.2:
Age at menarche
Physical changes during puberty
• Secondary sex characteristics physical
characteristics other than genital development that
indicate sexual maturity
– both sexes:
•
•
•
•
pubic hair,
growth spurt (earlier in girls)
genitals enlarge
axillary oil-secretion
– females:
• breast buds
• voice changes
- males
• voice deepens
• facial hair
Physical changes during puberty
secondary
primary
Sexual behavior during adolescence
• The sexual double standard
– Different standards of sexual permissiveness for
women and men--more restrictive standards are
applied to women
– Recent evidence suggests that double standard
exists but may be diminishing
– Males
• focus of sexuality = conquest
• peers reinforce aggressive & independent behaviors
– females
• focus of sexuality = relationship
• dilemma: need to appear sexy to attract males, but
does not want to appear “easy”
Sexual behavior during adolescence
• Masturbation
– increase in frequency & numbers
• By the end of adolescence, almost all males, and ~3/4 of females
have masturbated
– safe sexual release
– learn about self
• Noncoital sexual expression
– Noncoital sex: physical contact excluding coitus (i.e.
kissing, touching, and manual or oral-genital stimulation)
– oral-genital activity has increased
– how far to go often an issue
– learning about sexual intimacy
– technically can “stay a virgin”
Sexual behavior during adolescence
• Ongoing sexual relationships
– more common at this age than in past
– narrowing of gender gap: females less likely to "save
themselves" for marriage; males more likely to want an
affectionate relationship
• Sexual intercourse
– incidence of teen coitus:
strong upward trend from
1950s through the 1970s
Upward trend has leveled
off, & even decreased
in last two decades
Sexual behavior during adolescence
• From 1991-2005, overall % of h.s. students in U.S. who had
ever had intercourse declined somewhat for all grade levels
• Condom use among sexually active h.s. students  somewhat
9
10
SCAN IN FIG. 12.4, p.333
11
12
Sexual behavior during adolescence
Reasons for having first intercourse
Factors that predispose teenagers to:
• Early intercourse
– Low SES/poverty
– Family conflict/marital
disruption/single-parent or
reconstituted family
– Low parent education and
supervision
– Substance abuse
– Low self-esteem,
hopelessness
– Poor academic
performance
– Exposure to TV w/high
sexual content
– Previous sexual abuse
• Later intercourse
– Higher SES
– Religious beliefs
– Spiritual interconnectedness
w/friends
– Good relationship with
parents, and perception of
parental disapproval of teen
intercourse
– good school performance
– Late onset of puberty
American ethnic diversity in
adolescent sexual experiences
• African American teens are more likely to engage in
coitus than either white or Latino American
teenagers
• Ethnic differences in adolescent sexual
experiences may be related more to socioeconomic
status than to race/ethnicity
– African American adolescents raised in more affluent
homes are more likely to abstain from intercourse than
their poorer counterparts
12-B Discussion question:
Assume that you are a parent of a
teenager who asks, “How do I know
when I should have sex?” What
would you answer, and why?
Homosexual identity & experiences
during adolescence
• Same-sex sexual contact between peers common
– May reflect experimentation or may be an expression of a lifelong
sexual orientation
• Some gays & lesbians do begin to define their homosexuality
as teens
– frequently experience adverse societal reactions
• Double rebuke--b/c they are sexually active in the 1st place
and b/c of their sexual orientation
• Reconciling orientation can be difficult; are often rejected by
peers and family
– Adolescents who are thought to be homosexual are sometimes bullied,
harassed, or physically assaulted
– Disproportionately high rates of depression, substance abuse, and
suicide attempts among gay teens
Homosexual identity & experiences
during adolescence
• Support for teens with same-sex
orientation is increasing
• Gay-Straight Alliances now exist on
high school and college
– Clubs composed of gay and straight
people who exchange information and
support, work to change anti-homosexual
attitudes in their schools
many
campuses
Effect of AIDS on teen sexual
behavior
• Largest % of AIDS cases in US are people in
their 20s and 30s who were infected w/HIV in
their teens and 20s.
– People < age 25 account for 50% of new HIV infxns.
• Most teens know the basic facts about AIDS and
other STDs, but falsely believe that they are not
at risk
– Don’t change their behavior to protect against HIV,
other STIs
• condoms viewed more as BC than as STI
protection
– No protection used for anal sex, oral sex
Adolescent Pregnancy
• The U.S. has the highest teen pregnancy rate in the
Western industrialized world--roughly 4x higher than in several
W. European nations, even though the levels of teen sexual activity in
these countries are ~ the same
– 1 in 5 sexually active teens becomes pregnant each year
• Of these: 51% result in live births, 35% in induced abortion, and
14% in miscarriage or stillbirth
– impacts teen mother's and baby’s physical health
• More complications in pregnancy in teen moms
• Pregnant teens are very unlikely to use protection against STDs
– impacts SES and education
• Teen moms often drop out of school, many do not return
• Future employment options limited, often dep. on social services
– impacts quality of parenting
• Children of teen moms are more likely to have physical, cognitive,
and emotional problems; problems in school, etc.
Contraceptive use among teens
• Teens less likely to use BC consistently or correctly;
Why?
– Lack of adequate knowledge about BC options
– Abstinence-only sex education programs in schools
• Teach teens that abstinence is the only option w/o providing any
positive information on effective contraceptive methods
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Planning ahead implies loose morals?
Fear of pelvic exam; embarrassment about seeking BC
Confidentiality concerns
Less stable relationships
Difficulty communicating with partner
Positive note: contraceptive use among teens is higher
today than it was 10 - 20 years ago.
Factors correlated w/teens who are:
• More likely to use BC
– In stable relationship;
good communication
w/partner
– Able to communicate with
parent about BC
– Feel competent and have
good self-esteem
– Have families which stress
personal responsibility
– Have access to BC info
– Good performance in
school and have welleducated parents
• Less likely to use BC
– Not in stable relationship;
sporadic intercourse
– Teen women involved
w/older (3+ yr) partner
– Teens who have sex at
earlier ages
– When intercourse occurs
after alcohol consumptn.
– Lack of sexual
confidence &
assertiveness (esp. in
teen women)
Strategies to reduce teen pregnancy
• Free, confidential contraceptive services
– Family planning clinics, school-based health clinics
• Compulsory national sex-education
– Should occur before most teens are sexually active
– Safe expression of teen sexuality should be treated as a
health issue rather than a political or religious issue
• Focus on shared responsibility for BC
– Teen males often consider BC to be female’s responsibility
– Survey: teens that believe that responsibility for BC should
be shared are more likely to have used BC effectively
• Relax governmental restrictions
– Research shows that making condoms available in middle
schools and high schools increased condom use by sexually
active teens, but did not contribute to any increase in teen
sexual activity
Sex education: parents
• Most kids begin to ask how babies are made by ~4
– Important not to blunt their curiosity (i.e. “You’re too young
to learn about such things”
– Try to respond w/a sense of ease and naturalness; ok to
express if you feel uneasy discussing sex
– Keep answers direct, honest, and at the child’s level of
understanding
– Let child know that you are open to more questions
• If child’s questions don’t arise spontaneously, parent
may want to initiate a discussion about sex
– Some open-ended questions:
• What do you think sex is?
• What do you know about how babies are made?
• What are some of the things that your friends tell you about sex?
Sex education: parents
INITIATING CONVERSATIONS ABOUT SPECIFIC TOPICS
• Some topics don’t get discussed unless parents take
the initiative
• Make child aware of physiological changes before they
actually happen
– Menstruation, first ejaculation, nocturnal orgasms, etc. can
come as quite a shock to someone who is unprepared
• Most young people prefer that their parents be the
primary source of information about sex
• Adolescent children who have open, positive, and
frequent communication w/parents are more likely to
have fewer sexual partners and later and less frequent
sexual activity than teens who don’t talk to their
parents about sex
School-based sex education
• 52% of school districts, and 57% of school require sex
education at the elementary school level (2001)
• Quality of programming varies
– Many programs leave out info about how BC, STIs, discussions of
interpersonal aspects of sexuality (stick to “safe” topics, like
reproduction and anatomy)
• Most parents support sex ed in schools
– Poll: 93% of adults support sex ed in h.s., and 84% support sex ed in
middle school
– Majority of adults reject abstinence-only approach to sex ed and believe
teens should be given info about how to avoid STIs and unplanned
pregnancies
• Research shows that comprehensive sex ed programs do not
increase sexual activity, but they do decrease high-risk
behaviors
Abstinence-only sex education
• Survey of nationally representative sample of school districts
– 35% taught abstinence only sex ed (discussion of BC is prohibited, or
BC is simply said to be ineffective)
– 14% taught comprehensive sex ed (includes info about sexual
maturation, BC, abortion, STIs, relationship issues, and sexual
orientation)
• Congressional report (2004): majority of federally funded
abstinence-only programs presented inaccurate and
misleading information, failed to separate science & religion
• So far, $900 million federal tax dollars have been spent to fund
abstinence-only sex ed programs, and $0 has been spent on
comprehensive sex ed
• Data shows that:
– abstinence-only programs have no effect on adolescents’ attitudes
toward sex or when they begin engaging in sexual activity
– No reduction in teen pregnancy and spread of STIs