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Prevalence of Intoxicating Substance Use Before or During Sex Among Young Adults : A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Gómez-Núñez, María Isabel (International University of La Rioja, UNIR. Department of Research Methods and Diagnostics in Education)
Molla Esparza, Cristian (University of Valencia, UVEG. Department of Research Methods and Diagnostics in Education)
Gandia Carbonell, Natalia (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Departament de Psicobiologia i de Metodologia de Ciències de la Salut)
Badenes Ribera, Laura (University of Valencia, UVEG. Department of Methodology of the Behavioural Sciences)

Date: 2023
Abstract: Drug use before or during sex is a high-risk sexual behavior associated with adverse health risks and outcomes, such as increasing the likelihood of overdoses and of acquiring sexually-transmitted diseases. This systematic review and meta-analysis of three scientific databases examined the prevalence of the use of intoxicating substances, those tending to excite or stupefy the user on a psychoactive level, before or during sex, among young adults (18-29 years old). A total of 55 unique empirical studies met the inclusion criteria (48,145 individuals; 39% males), were assessed for risk of bias using the tools of Hoy et al. (2012), and were analyzed via a generalized linear mixed-effects model. The results produced a global mean prevalence of this sexual risk behavior of 36. 98% (95% CI: 28. 28%, 46. 63%). Nonetheless, significant differences were identified between different intoxicating substances, with the use of alcohol (35. 10%; 95% CI: 27. 68%, 43. 31%), marijuana (27. 80%; 95% CI: 18. 24%, 39. 92%), and ecstasy (20. 90%; 95% CI: 14. 34%, 29. 45%) significantly more prevalent than that of cocaine (4. 32%; 95% CI: 3. 64%, 5. 11%), heroin (. 67%; 95% CI: . 09%, 4. 65%), methamphetamine (7. 10%; 95% CI: 4. 57%, 10. 88%), and GHB (6. 55%; 95% CI: 4. 21%, 10. 05%). Moderator analyses showed that the prevalence of alcohol use before or during sex differed according to geographical sample origin, and increased as the proportion of ethnic whites in samples increased. The remaining demographic (e. g. , gender, age, reference population), sexual (e. g. , sexual orientation, sexual activity), health (e. g. , drug consumption, STI/STD status), methodological (e. g. , sampling technique), and measurement (e. g. , timeframe) variables that were examined did not moderate prevalence estimates. Implications for sexual development interventions were discussed.
Grants: Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación PGC2018-100675-B-I00
Rights: Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, fins i tot amb finalitats comercials, sempre i quan es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original. Creative Commons
Language: Anglès
Document: Article ; recerca ; Versió publicada
Subject: Sexual risk behavior ; Sex ; Drugs ; Young adults ; Meta-analysis ; Substance use
Published in: Archives of Sexual Behavior, Vol. 52 (march 2023) , p. 2503-2526, ISSN 1573-2800

DOI: 10.1007/s10508-023-02572-z
PMID: 36897426


24 p, 1.3 MB

The record appears in these collections:
Articles > Research articles
Articles > Published articles

 Record created 2023-10-04, last modified 2023-10-07



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