Incidence and predictors of adolescent's early sexual debut after three decades of HIV interventions in tanzania: A time to debut analysis

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Abstract

Purpose: To determine the incidence and predictors of adolescent's early sexual debut after three decades of HIV interventions in Tanzania. Methods: In a cross-section study of adolescents aged 16-19 residing in Morogoro Municipality, information on socio-demographic, parental-and-peer communication, and sexual behaviors were collected. Cox-regression analysis was used to examine predictors of time to sexual debut. Results: A total of 316 adolescents with mean age of 17.5±0.9 were recruited. Half (48.7%) of adolescent were sexually active with mean age at sexual debut of 14.6±2.3. Of these, 57.8% had sex before their 15th birthday with incidence of early sexual debut of 17.4/1000 person-years at risk. Adolescent family characteristics, peer pressure, alcohol use, parental and peer communication were key predictors of early sexual debut. Conclusion: Parental and peer communication strategies works calling for efforts to increase its scope to reach all adolescents alongside promoting family stability and reducing adolescent alcohol consumption. © 2012 Mmbaga et al.

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Mmbaga, E. J., Leonard, F., & Leyna, G. H. (2012). Incidence and predictors of adolescent’s early sexual debut after three decades of HIV interventions in tanzania: A time to debut analysis. PLoS ONE, 7(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0041700

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