Cracking the code to female sexual satisfaction: the serial mediation of sexual behavior and the perceived importance of healthy sexuality from sexual self-efficacy
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ogallar Blanco, Adelaida Irene; Lara Moreno, Raquel; García-Pérez, Raquel; Liñán González, Antonio; Godoy Izquierdo, DéboraEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Sexual satisfaction Sexual self-efficacy Sexual behavior Sexual health Females’ sexuality
Fecha
2024-05-17Referencia bibliográfica
Ogallar-Blanco AI, Lara-Moreno R, García-Pérez R, Liñán-González A and Godoy-Izquierdo D (2024) Cracking the code to female sexual satisfaction: the serial mediation of sexual behavior and the perceived importance of healthy sexuality from sexual self-efficacy. Front. Psychol. 15:1305399. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1305399]
Resumen
Introduction: Sexual satisfaction has been shown to have a strong association
with many aspects of sexual health and wellbeing. It is further considered a
robust indicator of an individual’s health status and general wellbeing, revealing
that a person can enjoy pleasurable and healthy sexual experiences, beyond the
mere absence of sexual and reproductive health issues.
Objectives: This study aimed to analyze the relationship between sexual
satisfaction, sexual behaviors, sexual self-efficacy, and the importance
personally attributed to maintaining an active and satisfying sexual life among
young and middle-aged women aged 18–50.
Design: A descriptive correlational study with a cross-sectional design was
conducted.
Methods: Participants (N = 1,076 women) completed self-reports on sexual
self-efficacy beliefs, frequency of sexual behaviors, the importance attributed
to active and healthy sexuality, and multidimensional sexual satisfaction.
Results: The supported mediation model indicated that sexual self-efficacy was
related to sexual satisfaction directly and indirectly through sexual behavior and
a serial path through sexual behavior and the perceived importance of healthy
sexuality. The total effect was significant, and the full model explained 7.3% of
the global sexual satisfaction variance (F = 17.218, p = 0.000), with the mediated
effect accounting for 44.3%.
Conclusion: This study confirms a partial serial mediation model by which sexual
self-efficacy significantly predicts sexual satisfaction through sexual behaviors
and the importance attributed to a healthy sexuality. Due to its significant
contribution, the perceived importance of sexuality should be considered when studying correlates of sexual satisfaction. These findings have interesting
implications for the development of strategies aimed at sexual health promotion
and sexual education among women in early and middle adulthood.
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