A University of Pittsburgh study sheds new light on the relationship between race, body weight and sexual behaviour among adolescent girls. The results suggest that a girl's ethnicity and her actual weight or perception of her weight may play a role in her participation in risky sexual behaviours. The study results are published in the November issue of Pediatrics, now available online.
The study, conducted by Aletha Akers, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of gynaecology and reproductive sciences at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and colleagues, further links girls at weight extremes with an increased risk for engaging in sexual risk-taking behaviours.
'This study will contribute to sexual health education prevention efforts, which can be tailored to address how cultural norms regarding body size may influence adolescent sexual decision making. Knowing how a girl perceives her weight may be just as important as knowing her actual weight,' noted Dr Akers.
Of the nearly 7,200 high school girls asked about their sexual activity and risky sexual behaviour as part of the 2005 Youth Risk Behaviour Surveillance survey, half reported ever having sex. Those girls who were both sexually active and overweight, or who thought they were overweight, were less likely to use condoms than normal-weight sexually active girls. Underweight girls also were less likely to use condoms.
The findings also suggested variability in the girls' sexual activity and sexual risk-taking behaviour based on their ethnicity and actual or perceived weight.
- Caucasian girls who believed that they were underweight, whether accurate or not, were more likely to have had sex and to have had four or more sexual partners. Overweight Caucasian girls were less likely to use condoms.
- Underweight African-American girls also were less likely to use condoms while overweight African-American girls reported four or more sexual partners.
- Latina girls of all weights were more likely to engage in a wide variety of sexual risk behaviours - lack of condom or oral contraception use, sex before age 13, greater than four sexual partners and use of alcohol.
How diarrhoeal bacteria cause some colon cancersJohns Hopkins scientists say they have figured out how bacteria that cause diarrhoea may also be the culprit in some colon cancers. The investigators say that strains of the common... — full story
Inherited risk factors increase odds of developing childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemiaScientists at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have identified inherited variations in two genes that account for 37 percent of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), including... — full story
Scientists create energy-burning brown fat in miceResearchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have shown that they can engineer mouse and human cells to produce brown fat, a natural energy-burning type of fat that counteracts obesity.... — full story
Genome of parasitic flatworm that causes schistosomiasis decodedAn international team of scientists has sequenced the genome of Schistosoma mansoni, a parasitic worm, commonly known as a blood fluke, that infects 210 million in 76 countries through... — full story