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Journal of Sex Research

Volume 49, Issue 1, 2012

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“The Young Ones are the Condom Generation”: Condom Use amongst Out-of-School Adolescents in Rural Southwest Uganda

“The Young Ones are the Condom Generation”: Condom Use amongst Out-of-School Adolescents in Rural Southwest Uganda

DOI:
10.1080/00224499.2011.568126
Ann-Maree Nobeliusa*, Bessie Kalinab, Robert Poolc, Jimmy Whitworthd, Janice Chesterse & Robert Powerf

pages 88-102

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Abstract

This article reports on factors influencing condom use among out-of-school adolescents in rural southwest Uganda. Despite an abundance of negative discourses and myths about condoms in the community, these adolescents believe condoms protect them from sexually transmitted infections, HIV, and premarital pregnancies. Girls want partners to use condoms, but most lack the confidence to insist. Girls aged 13 to 14 reported the least difficulty asking for condoms; older girls attributed this to coming-of-age in the era of AIDS when condom use is the norm. Boys under 16 years want to use condoms, but lack confidence in application skills. Boys over 17 years always use condoms with casual partners, but only occasionally for pregnancy prevention with steady partners. Girls need skills training to improve confidence in negotiating condom use. Younger boys require training to improve confidence in skills with condom application. These findings are compared with studies conducted with in-school adolescents in the same study area. Health promotions that provide this skills training and focus on the need to think of the health of future family would be most effective for out-of-school adolescents. This study shows that it is self-confidence, rather than years of schooling, that has the greatest impact on condom use in this cohort.

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Details

  • Citation information:
  • Published online: 22 Apr 2011

Author affiliations

  • a School of Rural Health, Centre for Medical and Health Sciences Education, Monash University
  • b Social Sciences Unit, Medical Research Council (United Kingdom), Program on AIDS in Uganda
  • c Barcelona Centre for International Health Research, Universitat de Barcelona
  • d Wellcome Trust
  • e School of Rural Health, Monash University
  • f Burnet Institute

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