Type of Sex Education in Childhood and Adolescence: Influence on Young People’s Sexual Experimentation, Risk and Satisfaction: The Necessity of Establishing School Nursing as a Pillar
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Navarro Prado, Silvia; Tovar Gálvez, María Isabel; Sanchez Ojeda, Maria Angustias; Luque Vara, Trinidad; Fernández Gómez, Elisabet; Martín Salvador, Adelina; Marín Jiménez, Ana EugeniaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Adolescent Childhood Internet Personal satisfaction School nursing Sex education Social Networking
Fecha
2023-07-06Referencia bibliográfica
Navarro-Prado, S.; Tovar-Gálvez, M.I.; Sánchez-Ojeda, M.A.; Luque-Vara, T.; Fernández-Gómez, E.; Martín-Salvador, A.; Marín-Jiménez, A.E. Type of Sex Education in Childhood and Adolescence: Influence on Young People’s Sexual Experimentation, Risk and Satisfaction: The Necessity of Establishing School Nursing as a Pillar. Healthcare 2023, 11, 1668. [https://doi.org/10.3390/ healthcare11121668]
Resumen
The aim is to identify the source of sexuality education used during childhood and adolescence
and to analyse whether this education influences their sexual attitudes, their ability to
cope with unwanted situations they experience and their satisfaction with their sexual lives. This
is a non-experimental, quantitative, ex post facto, cross-sectional study. The sample is formed of
675 young people, with 50% of the ages included being between 20 (Quartile 1) and 22 (Quartile 3)
years. The data collection was done by means of an online questionnaire, including sociodemographic
and Likert questions about their sex life. Fisher “Independence Contrasts”and correlations were
used to see and quantify the relationship among the variables. The main source of education was
pornography (29.3%) and the internet (12.4%). The source of education has a significant relationship
with whether the use of contraceptives is accepted or not (p < 0.001), refusal to use contraceptives
(p < 0.001), engaging in risky sexual practices (p < 0.001), facing unwanted sexual situations (p < 0.001)
and dissatisfaction with their sex life (p < 0.001). It is necessary that children and adolescents have
sex education in safe environments, such as in a home or school setting, and the school nurse plays a
vital part in this education. This would reduce the need for adolescents and young people to use the
internet and pornography as a source of education. School nurses should be the educational axis to
offer children and adolescents a reliable point of information about sex education. A joint work with
teachers, nurses, students and parents would contribute positively to reduce the number of risky
situations young people are facing, and it would promote and improve healthy attitudes towards sex
and interpersonal relationships.