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Adolescent Sexuality (page 4)

By L.B. Blume|M.J. Zembar
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Contraceptive Use

Adolescents’ understanding of contraception as well as their motivation to use it is determined not only by individual characteristics (e.g., gender, race, cognitive level) but also by how their friends, families, teachers, and society at large perceive its use and effectiveness (Lagana, 1999). Condoms and birth control pills are the two most commonly used methods of contraception. The Youth Risk Behavior Survey (CDC, 2003) reports that 63% of adolescents said they used condoms during their last sexual intercourse, up from 46.2% who reported condom use in 1991. The reported use of condoms, however, is highest in the 9th and 10th grades (69%) and then drops to 57.4% in 12th grade. In addition, males report higher use (68.8%) than females (57.4%), and 81.2% of African American males reported condom use during their most recent sexual intercourse experience.

When asked about using birth control pills during last intercourse, 22.6% of all adolescents responded affirmatively. Such use increases from 9th to 12th grade, and females report higher use (27.2%) than males (17.5%). White American females report the highest use of birth control pills (26.5%), with African American females reporting the lowest use (11.7%). Other contraceptive methods used included injectable contraception (10%), withdrawal (4%), and implants (3%) (Alan Guttmacher Institute (AGI), 1998).

Although the use of contraceptives is increasing, many adolescents (37%) do not use any, use them inconsistently, or do not use them during first-time intercourse. An adolescent who does not use effective contraception consistently has a 90% chance of pregnancy within a year (AGI, 1998). Because unsafe sexual practices, such as not using a condom, may result in an unplanned pregnancy or a life-threatening sexually transmitted disease, researchers have tried to understand which adolescents are least likely to use contraceptives and why. Adolescents under 13 are less likely to use contraceptives or use them consistently (Kirby, 2001). Adolescent females are particularly vulnerable to the contraceptive preferences of a partner with whom they would like to stay emotionally connected (Tschann, Adler, Millstein, Gurvey, & Ellen, 2002). Adolescents who have a positive and warm relationship with their parents and are able to talk about sexual behavior and contraceptive use are more likely to use protection (Kirby, 2002a, 2002b).

Focus groups with Latina and African American youth ages 14 to 19 were conducted to try to understand their knowledge of and attitudes toward contraception. The most frequently mentioned barrier to consistent and effective use of contraception was misinformation provided by friends, relatives, and neighbors about current contraceptive practices (Aaron & Jenkins, 2002).

African American Participant 1:  This girl, she got Norplant in her arm. And some other girls told me it don’t work, but she got pregnant when she had hers.
Moderator:  Somebody got pregnant with Norplant?
African American Participant 1:  That’s what she told me.
African American Participant 2:  They say it’s not for everybody to get Norplant.
African American Participant 1:  Well, it won’t be for me.
Moderator:  And what do you think is the best [contraceptive] method?
Latina Participant 1:  None.
Moderator:  No method?
Latina Participant 1:  Maybe condoms or injections, and the pill.
Latina Participant 2:  But they say that condoms break sometimes.
Latina Participant 1:  Yes they break. (from Aarons & Jenkins, 2002, pp. 17–18)


The teens in this study conveyed a sense that no single contraceptive was infallible and might even cause side effects (e.g., cancer from implants). Therefore, using contraceptives was perceived as equally risky as not using them and pregnancy was perceived as somewhat inevitable. Other reasons for noncontraceptive use are

  • Unavailability (i.e., they were unprepared)
  • Being prepared (i.e., carrying a condom) might send the wrong message (e.g., slut versus good girl)
  • Too costly
  • Uncomfortable (i.e., condoms reduced sensation and feelings of pleasure)
  • No use of contraception is a sign of trust and fidelity in a sexual relationship
  • Teens feel ambivalent or positively predisposed towards pregnancy

Aspects of contraceptive education programs that successfully increase use include

  • Increased contraceptive availability and affordability
  • The building of psychosocial skills that teach proactive contraceptive practices and conversational strategies
  • The changing of the subculture so that contraceptive use becomes the norm rather than the exception

Contraceptive education programs are usually incorporated into sex education classes of school- or community-based pregnancy prevention programs. Several consistent findings among studies that evaluate components of contraceptive education are that making condoms more available to adolescents does not increase sexual activity but does increase the percentage of youth who report using condoms (Schuster, Bell, Berry, & Kanouse, 1998; Sellers, McGraw, & McKinlay, 1994). Another finding is that education/prevention programs are more effective with those adolescents who have not yet had intercourse. For some populations (e.g., Black urban youth), this means providing contraceptive information or making condoms available sooner (fifth or sixth grade) rather than later (Johnson, 2002).

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