Ambiguity of Monogamy as a Safer-sex Goal Among Single, Pregnant, Inner-city Women
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Health Psychology
- Vol. 3 (2) , 227-232
- https://doi.org/10.1177/135910539800300206
Abstract
We examined the ambiguity of monogamy as a safer-sex goal in a sample of young, inner- city women (N = 447), of whom 58 percent were African- American and 42 percent European-American. It was our premise that women may be misperceiving and underestimating their risk due to differences in their definition and beliefs about monogamy, and thus are not changing their behavior. When compared to long-term monogamous women (self-reporting one partner in the past year), serially monogamous women (reporting two or more partners in the past year) perceived themselves at greater risk but did not report more frequent use of condoms. It is possible that a suggestion of monogamy may be subject to multiple interpretations and thus could be providing women with a false sense of safety. Risk reduction should be defined in specific behavioral terms.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prevention of HIV infectionAIDS, 1994
- Predictors of condom‐related behaviors among first‐year college studentsThe Journal of Sex Research, 1993
- Safer sex knowledge, behavior, and attitudes of inner-city women.Health Psychology, 1993
- Changing AIDS-risk behavior.Psychological Bulletin, 1992
- AIDS‐related attitudes in the United States: A preliminary conceptualizationThe Journal of Sex Research, 1991
- Current and future dimensions of the HIV/AIDS pandemic in women and childrenThe Lancet, 1990
- Sexual Behavior of College Women in 1975, 1986, and 1989New England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- Towards an Understanding of Risk Behavior: An AIDS Risk Reduction Model (ARRM)Health Education Quarterly, 1990
- Women and AIDS-related concerns: Roles for psychologists in helping the worried well.American Psychologist, 1989
- Misperception Among Gay Men of the Risk for AIDS Associated with Their Sexual Behavior1Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1987