Content area

Abstract

To fully understand late adolescents' experiences of oral sex, we must consider both risk and normative developmental perspectives. Sexual experiences include a range of behaviors, but research on sexual behaviors and consequences focuses primarily on vaginal sex. Oral sex occurs at rates similar to vaginal sex, and carries some, though less, risk than vaginal sex. The current study examined the event-level prevalence and consequences of oral sex compared to vaginal sex with other-sex partners in first-year college students. Daily data were from recently sexually active first-year college students (N = 253 people, 834 days; M age, 18.4 years; SD = 0.4; 56 % female; 31 % Hispanic/Latino; 17 % African American, 14 % Asian American/Pacific Islander, 25 % European American, 12 % multiracial) who reported on sexual behaviors and consequences. Both positive (intimacy, physical satisfaction) and negative (worrying about health, guilt) consequences were less common for oral than vaginal sex. Gender differences suggested that female adolescents may find vaginal sex more rewarding than oral sex, whereas male adolescents may find them equally rewarding.

Details

Title
Oral vs. Vaginal Sex Experiences and Consequences Among First-Year College Students
Author
Lefkowitz, Eva S; Vasilenko, Sara A; Leavitt, Chelom E
Pages
329-337
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Feb 2016
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
00040002
e-ISSN
15732800
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1754760775
Copyright
Springer Science+Business Media New York 2016