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Citation

Landor, Antoinette M. & Halpern, Carolyn Tucker (2016). Prevalence of High-Risk Sexual Behaviors among Monoracial and Multiracial Groups from a National Sample: Are Multiracial Young Adults at Greater Risk?. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 45(2), 467-475. PMCID: PMC4784959

Abstract

The present study compared the prevalence and variation in high-risk sexual behaviors among four monoracial (i.e., White, African American, Asian, Native American) and four multiracial (i.e., White/African American, White/Asian, White/Native American, African American/Native American) young adults using Wave IV data (2008-2009) from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (N = 9724). Findings indicated differences in the sexual behavior of monoracial and multiracial young adults, but directions of differences varied depending on the monoracial group used as the referent and gender. Among males, White/African Americans had higher risk than Whites; White/Native Americans had higher risk than Native Americans. Otherwise, multiracial groups had lower risk or did not differ from the single-race groups. Among females, White/Native Americans had higher risk than Whites; White/African Americans had higher risk than African Americans. Other comparisons showed no differences or had lower risk among multiracial groups. Variations in high-risk sexual behaviors underscore the need for health research to disaggregate multiracial groups to better understand health behaviors and outcomes in the context of experiences associated with a multiracial background, and to improve prevention strategies.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-015-0647-5

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2016

Journal Title

Archives of Sexual Behavior

Author(s)

Landor, Antoinette M.
Halpern, Carolyn Tucker

PMCID

PMC4784959

ORCiD

Halpern - 0000-0003-4278-5646