From coitus to concurrency: Sexual partnership characteristics and risk behaviors of 15-19 year old men recruited from urban venues in Tanzania

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Abstract

Understanding the uptake and patterns of sexual partnerships of adolescent males reveals their risky behaviors that could persist into adulthood. Using venue-based sampling, we surveyed 671 male youth ages 15-19 from an urban Tanzanian neighborhood about their sexual partnerships during the past 6 months. The proportion of males who had ever had sex increased with age (21 % at age 15; 70 % at age 17; 94 % at age 19), as did the proportion who engaged in concurrency (5 % at age 15; 28 % at age 17; 44 % at age 19). Attendance at ≥2 social venues per day and meeting a sexual partner at a venue was associated with concurrency. Concurrency was associated with alcohol consumption before sex among 18-19 year olds and with not being in school among 15-17 year olds. We find that concurrency becomes normative over male adolescence. Venue-based sampling may reach youth vulnerable to developing risky sexual partnership patterns. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

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Yamanis, T. J., Doherty, I. A., Weir, S. S., Bowling, J. M., Kajula, L. J., Mbwambo, J. K., & Maman, S. (2013). From coitus to concurrency: Sexual partnership characteristics and risk behaviors of 15-19 year old men recruited from urban venues in Tanzania. AIDS and Behavior, 17(7), 2405–2415. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-012-0312-0

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