Sexual risk behaviour among school-going adolescents in Sierra Leone and Liberia: a secondary analysis of the 2017 Global school-based student health surveys

被引:7
作者
James, Peter Bai [1 ,2 ]
Osborne, Augustus [3 ]
Bah, Abdulai Jawo [2 ,4 ]
Margao, Emmanuel Kamanda [2 ]
Conteh-Barrat, Mohamed [5 ]
机构
[1] Southern Cross Univ, Fac Hlth, Natl Ctr Naturopath Med, Lismore, Australia
[2] Univ Sierra Leone, Coll Med & Allied Hlth Sci, Fac Pharmaceut Sci, Freetown, Sierra Leone
[3] Njala Univ, Sch Environm Sci, Dept Biol Sci, Njala Campus, Njala, Sierra Leone
[4] Queen Margaret Univ Edinburg, Inst Global Hlth & Dev, Musselburgh, Scotland
[5] St Josephs Catholic Hosp, Monrovia, Liberia
关键词
Adolescents; Sexual risk behaviour; Sierra Leone; Liberia; FORMER CHILD SOLDIERS; PROTECTIVE FACTORS; PREVALENCE; MOZAMBIQUE; PATTERNS; VIOLENCE;
D O I
10.1186/s40834-022-00193-w
中图分类号
R71 [妇产科学];
学科分类号
100211 ;
摘要
Background: Sierra Leone and Liberia have experienced civil wars and, recently, Ebola outbreaks that led to profound economic hardship, psychopathologies and family disruptions. These factors are associated with sexual risk behaviours among youths. However, there is very little information on sexual risk behaviour among Sierra Leonean and Liberian school-going adolescents. The present study assessed the prevalence and determinants of sexual risk behaviours among school-going adolescents (10-19 years) in Sierra Leone and Liberia. Method: We used publicly available nationally representative cross-sectional datasets of the 2017 Sierra Leone and Liberia Global school health survey. The sample consisted of 2798 and 2744 school-going adolescents from Sierra Leone and Liberia, respectively. Complex sample descriptive and regression analysis was used to analyse our data. Results: The majority of adolescents in the two countries were involved in multiple sexual risk behaviour (80.2%), with a higher prevalence observed in Sierra Leone (85.2%) than in Liberia (75.3%). Liberian adolescents showed lesser odds of indulging in multiple sexual risk behaviours than their Sierra Leonean counterparts (AOR = 0.572; 95%CI: 0.345-0.946). Male, compared to females, were more likely to engage in multiple sexual risk behaviour (AOR = 2.310;95%CI:1.543-3.458), with a similar pattern observed in both countries. Alcohol use was associated with multiple sexual risk behaviour (AOR = 3.064; 95%CI: 2.137-4.392). Also, in Sierra Leone and Liberia, adolescents with one and two or more forms of psychological distress were more likely to have ever had sex than those who did not show any form of psychological distress. Missing class/school was associated with multiple sexual risk behaviour (AOR = 1.655; 95%CI:1.133-2.418). Peer support was only found to be a protective factor against no condom use among Liberian adolescents (AOR = 0.608; 95%CI: 0.435-0.850). Less parental support was only associated with ever had sex among adolescents in Sierra Leone (AOR = 2.027; 95%CI: 1.322-3.107) but not in Liberia (AOR = 1.034; 95%CI: 0.650-1.644). Conclusion: Our study found a high sexual risk behaviour among school-going adolescents in Sierra Leone and Liberia. Our finding highlights the need to strengthen sexual and reproductive health education in schools and communities that incorporate mental health promotion activities tailored to this group.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
[1]   Socioeconomic variations in risky sexual behavior among adolescents in 14 sub-Saharan Africa countries who report ever having had sex [J].
Ali, Mohamed M. ;
Merdad, Leena ;
Bellizzi, Saverio .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH, 2021, 20 (01)
[2]   The Impact of War Violence Exposure and Psychological Distress on Parenting Practices Among a Sample of Young Adults Affected by War Postconflict Sierra Leone [J].
Alleyne-Green, Binta ;
Kulick, Alex ;
Grocher, Kimberly Bonds ;
McCutcheon, Kendra P. DeLoach ;
Betancourt, Theresa S. .
PEACE AND CONFLICT-JOURNAL OF PEACE PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 25 (04) :325-334
[3]   The age of opportunity: prevalence of key risk factors among adolescents 10-19 years of age in nine communities in sub-Saharan Africa [J].
Berhane, Yemane ;
Canavan, Chelsey R. ;
Darling, Anne Marie ;
Sudfeld, Christopher R. ;
Vuai, Said ;
Adanu, Richard ;
Baernighausen, Till ;
Dessie, Yadeta ;
Bukenya, Justine Nnakate ;
Guwatudde, David ;
Killewo, Japhet ;
Sando, Mary M. ;
Sie, Ali ;
Oduola, Ayoade M. J. ;
Fawzi, Wafaie W. .
TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH, 2020, 25 (01) :15-32
[4]   High hopes, grim reality:: Reintegration and the education of former child soldiers in Sierra Leone [J].
Betancourt, Theresa S. ;
Simmons, Stephanie ;
Borisova, Ivelina ;
Brewer, Stephanie E. ;
Iweala, Uzo ;
de la Soudiere, Marie .
COMPARATIVE EDUCATION REVIEW, 2008, 52 (04) :565-587
[5]   Post-traumatic stress symptoms among former child soldiers in Sierra Leone: follow-up study [J].
Betancourt, Theresa S. ;
Newnham, Elizabeth A. ;
McBain, Ryan ;
Brennan, Robert T. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2013, 203 (03) :196-202
[6]  
Boas M., 2008, AFR J DRUG ALCOHOL S, V7, P41
[7]  
Borba Christina P C, 2016, Int J Cult Ment Health, V9, P56
[8]   Sexual Risk Behaviors Among Adolescents in Port-au-Prince, Haiti [J].
Carver, Jasmine W. ;
Devieux, Jessy G. ;
Gaston, Stephanie C. ;
Altice, Frederick L. ;
Niccolai, Linda M. .
AIDS AND BEHAVIOR, 2014, 18 (08) :1595-1603
[9]   Prevalence and social correlates of sexual intercourse among schoolgoing adolescents in Namibia [J].
Chinsembu, Kazhila C. ;
Siziya, Seter ;
Mulla, Adamson S. ;
Rudtsikira, Emmanuel .
SAHARA J-JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ASPECTS OF HIV-AIDS, 2008, 5 (03) :129-135
[10]   Global epidemiology of sexually transmitted diseases [J].
Da Ros, Carlos T. ;
Schmitt, Caio da Silva .
ASIAN JOURNAL OF ANDROLOGY, 2008, 10 (01) :110-114