(BlackDoctor.org) — Young women whose significant others are their primary source of spending money are more likely to report that they don’t use condoms, according to a study in the Journal of Adolescent Health.
• Almost one-quarter of the women in an HIV prevention study reported that they count on their significant other for spending money and that they had not used a condom in the preceding two months.
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• Women who receive spending money from their family or a job, versus from a significant other, are more likely to use condoms.
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These women may not explicitly exchange money for unprotected sex, says the report, “but their relationships may be implicitly transactional.”
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“We live in a consumerist society in which people may feel that they cannot belong unless they have certain things,” explains lead author Janet Rosenbaum, Ph.D., who studies sexual decision-making at the University of Maryland Population Research Center. “Women who have needs that they feel aren’t being met may act unwisely to meet those needs.”
“Safe sex interventions and clinicians must consider economic factors that may interfere with the practice of safe sex,” say the authors.
The new findings are based on detailed questionnaires completed by more than 700 African-American females participating in an HIV-prevention study in Atlanta. All were unmarried and sexually active.
The young women filled out surveys at the beginning, middle, and end of the one-year study.
Among those depending on a significant other for spending money, 25 percent said that their partner had not used a condom in the preceding two months. Among the other women, who received spending money from family members, employment or other sources, 15 percent reported having unprotected sex. Similarly, young women who discontinued receiving most of their money from their significant other during the study were more likely to use safe-sex behaviors.
Researchers matched the two groups on more than 75 characteristics, including education, relationship quality, and self esteem measures, so that there were no important differences between the women other than their primary source of spending money. Thus, the researchers say, safe sex programs that empower young women economically may be more effective than other methods.
“The decisions that women and men make in their relationships cross socioeconomic boundaries,” concurs Elizabeth Schroeder, Ed.D., executive director of Answer, a nonprofit dedicated to comprehensive sexuality education.
“This study only looks at half of the dyad. Similar research is needed to question young men about how economic factors affect their sexual decision-making. Sexual decision-making is complicated and complex, this study tries to simplify a really, really complicated topic,” Schroeder concludes.