Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2019

Intimate Partner Violence and Coerced Unprotected Sex Among Young Women Attending Community College

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The present study examined the mediating role of sexual assertiveness in the relationship between psychological, physical, and sexual intimate partner violence (IPV) victimization and unprotected sex as a result of condom use resistance among sexually active young women attending community college. Women reported engagement in unprotected sex as a result of a partner’s use of one of 32 forms of condom use resistance (e.g., physical force, deception, or other forms of coercion to avoid using a condom during intercourse). Women ages 18–24\xa0years ( N \u2009=\u2009212) attending community college were recruited through paper advertisements to complete assessments of social and dating behavior in the campus computer laboratory. Only the women with a history of sexual intercourse ( N \u2009=\u2009178; 84% of the sample) were included in analyses. More frequent engagement in unprotected sex as a result of a partner’s condom use resistance was associated with physical, psychological, and sexual IPV victimization. Sexual assertiveness mediated the relationship between physical IPV victimization and the frequency of unprotected sex as a result of condom use resistance. Efforts to prevent dating violence and enhance the sexual health of community college women may benefit from focusing on targeting sexual assertiveness as a protective factor.

Volume 49
Pages 871-882
DOI 10.1007/s10508-019-01537-5
Language English
Journal Archives of Sexual Behavior

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