Female Adolescent Sexuality


Book Description




"Little Bits and Pieces"


Book Description

Sexual communication between parents and adolescents is believed to be challenging. Ample research has examined parent-adolescent sexual communication, but has been limited. The current study was designed to overcome some of the limitations of previous research by interviewing nine mothers and their 19 year old daughters together and separately. Using Communication Privacy Management theory (Petronio, 2002) as a backdrop, the results reconstruct the process of sexual communication in close mother-daughter relationships. Namely, communication about sex begins when children are young. Daughters come to learn more about sex as they get older and their mothers reveal sexual information in small increments over time.




Your Daughter's Bedroom


Book Description

Your Daughter's Healthy Identity Starts With You After psychoanalyst Joyce McFadden treated countless women who felt alone and isolated in experiences that they were unaware many other women were dealing with too, she began to ask what she could do to help them reach out to each other. The result was the launch of her Women's Realities Study in which she interviewed hundreds of women from ages 18-105, about the most private issues as she sought to understand what events in a woman's life impact her future happiness and self-confidence. What McFadden found was truly revealing— the theme that most interested them as they explored their identities was how their relationship with their mothers influenced their understanding of themselves as sexual beings throughout their lives—from the time they were little girls straight through adulthood. Drawing on over a thousand responses, Your Daughter's Bedroom offers a new and unprecedented look at the mother-daughter bond. McFadden argues that the type of womanhood mothers model for their daughters determines the young girls' comfort with their own bodies which, in turn, leads to confidence and satisfaction later in life. From the most mundane and everyday gestures—a reluctance to call body parts by their real name; an offhanded suggestion to lose weight— to how mothers introduce life altering events such as the start of puberty and sexual exploration, all of these have an impact on a girl's psyche. She found that in an attempt to protect and shield daughters, mothers withhold important information and leave girls to wrestle with their own bourgeoning sexuality and other challenges of growing up. Offering a fresh perspective on the fraught mother-daughter relationship, McFadden shows how mothers can create the right environment for their daughters to grow into self-assured women. Your Daughter's Bedroom is an essential resource for women who want to establish a more open and positive relationship with their daughters.




The Effects of Mothers' Attitudes and Willingness to Communicate Regarding Sexuality with Adolescent Daughters After Attending a 4-hour Mother-daughter Communication Workshop


Book Description

The purpose of this quasi-experimental study was to determine the effect of a 4-hour mother/daughter sexuality workshop on the attitudes of mothers toward sexuality and their willingness to communicate sexuality to their adolescent daughters.







The Influence of the Mother-Daughter Relationship on Mexican-Origin Adolescent Girls' Sexual Agency


Book Description

Mexican-origin adolescent girls have some of the highest rates of unplanned teen pregnancy and births in the United States. Family ecological and feminist perspectives indicate that gender and sexual socialization processes contribute to girls' ability to promote their sexual health, yet little is known about how Mexican-origin girls develop sexual agency. In this culture, mothers are a primary socializing agent about sexuality in the family, and this study examined how mother-daughter sexual communication fostered or inhibited girls' sexual agency. The narrative method "scaffolded interviewing" was used to facilitate open talk about sexuality. Interviews were conducted with 25 girls ages 15-17 and separate interviews with mothers in a southwestern city, with a pilot study first conducted to refine the interview script. Mothers and daughters were asked reciprocal questions about what girls learned about sexuality from mothers and other contexts. The Listening Guide, a voice-based relational approach, was used to interpret the data. Analysis suggested that girls whose mothers provided more open and comprehensive sexual communication, and talked to them before puberty, felt more agentic to assert their needs for sexual safety. Girls who had infrequent, content-limited communication with mothers felt less able to manage fear-based school sex education messages and peer sexual exposure. Analysis of concordance between mothers' and daughters' narratives showed that different perceptions of what constitutes sex talk and sexual autonomy inhibited daughters' disclosure to mothers about sexual concerns. These findings suggest that mother-daughter relationships are critical for sexual health promotion. Implications for educators, practitioners, and families are discussed.




Mothers Perceptions on Mother-daughter Sexual Communication


Book Description

Purpose: Adolescent sexual health is in the forefront of the nation’s health agenda. Parents can play a critical role in decreasing adolescent sexual risk taking behaviors and improving adolescent sexual health. Parent-adolescent sexual communication (PASC) has been shown to decrease the adolescent’s sexual risk taking behaviors, delay their sexual debut and decrease teenage pregnancies. This study reports on the attitudes, beliefs, and knowledge mothers perceive as barriers and facilitators of sexual communication with their adolescent daughters between the ages of 11-14 years old in a suburban Ohio community. Significance: Using Bandura’s self-efficacy theory to understand the attitudes, beliefs, and content knowledge of mothers of adolescent females can help shape potential interventions, increase compliance and improve outcomes. By identifying barriers and facilitators of mother-daughter sexual communication, providers can create effective interventions and implementation strategies to optimize PASC. Methods: A qualitative study was used to investigate mother-daughter sexual communication from the mother’s perceptions. A convenience sample of ten mothers of adolescents’ females were recruited via social media and fliers in the community and they participated in semi-structured, one-on-one interviews to answer the following research questions: 1. What are the attitudes, beliefs, and content knowledge of mothers of adolescent females in a suburban Ohio community? 2. What do mothers perceive as significant barriers to effective PASC with their adolescent daughters in a suburban Ohio community? 3. What do mothers perceive as significant facilitators to effective PASC with their adolescent daughters in a suburban Ohio community?. The transcripts were analyzed for categories and themes using the steps of Data Analysis and Interpretation outlined by Hesse-Biber and Levy. Results: Mother’s perceived their role as a primary resource of sexual health information and educator. The data revealed the mothers felt confident in their content knowledge and ability to answer any questions. Perceived barriers were lack of initiation of PASC by the adolescent and the mothers’ fear of causing discomfort and embarrassment to their daughter. Mothers perceived signs of puberty and scheduled school based health talks as facilitators to PASC. Discussion: Results of this study can help healthcare providers develop interventions that promote mother-daughter sexual communication. Healthcare providers can play a vital role in developing and implementing these interventions in practice and the community.







Handbook of Women’s Sexual and Reproductive Health


Book Description

This volume is designed to motivate and engage scientists, policymakers, and practitioners to greater scientific discourse, reduce the stigma on and validate the importance of women's sexual and reproductive health. It brings together historians, anthropologists, psychologists, sociologists, epidemiologists, public health researchers, genetic counselors, attorneys, social workers, nurses and physicians, and presents comprehensive coverage that will benefit women's health advocates, students, and practitioners.