Medical College of Wisconsin
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A relative risk-based, disease-specific definition of sexual abstinence failure rates. Health Educ Behav 2001 Feb;28(1):10-20

Date

02/24/2001

Pubmed ID

11213138

DOI

10.1177/109019810102800102

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0035258628 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   19 Citations

Abstract

Sexual abstinence programs have the potential to reduce the incidence of unplanned pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) among adolescents. Effectiveness measures are needed to help researchers assess the impact of sexual abstinence promotion programs on STD and pregnancy rates and to enable comparisons of abstinence effectiveness with other contraception and STD prevention methods. Abstinence "failure rates" have been proposed as one measure of program effectiveness. However, the concept of abstinence failure rates has not been adequately operationalized. The present study examines a novel mathematical framework for estimating abstinence failure rates, both theoretically and empirically. Examples are provided, and the advantages and disadvantages associated with the mathematical model-based approach are discussed.

Author List

Pinkerton SD



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adolescent
Binomial Distribution
Coitus
Contraception
Female
Health Promotion
Humans
Models, Statistical
Pregnancy
Pregnancy in Adolescence
Pregnancy, Unwanted
Sex Education
Sexual Abstinence
Sexually Transmitted Diseases