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CONTEXT: In most developing countries, the
majority of sexually active female adolescents are married. Although married
adolescents are often assumed to be at low risk for HIV infection, little is
known about the actual HIV risks these adolescents face or about ways to
minimize these risks.
METHODS: Demographic and Health Surv data
from 29 countries in Africa and Latin America
were used to examine the frequency of factors that may increase HIV risk in
married women aged 15–19.
RESULTS: Several behavioral and social
factors may increase the vulnerability of married female adolescents to HIV
infection. First, these young women engage in frequent unprotected sex: In most
countries, more than 80% of adolescents who had had unprotected sex during the
previous week were married. Second, women who marry young tend to have much
older husbands (mean age difference, 5–14 years) and, in polygamous societies,
are frequently junior wives, factors that may increase the probability that
their husbands are infected and weaken their bargaining power within the
marriage. Third, married adolescents have relatively little access to
educational and media sources of information about HIV. Finally, the most
common AIDS prevention strategies (abstinence, condom use) are not realistic
options for many married adolescents.
CONCLUSION: New policies and interventions,
tailored to the sexual and behavioral profiles of women in each country, are
needed to address the vulnerabilities of adolescent wives. In some countries,
delaying age at marriage may be an important strategy; in others, making
intercourse within marriage safer may be more valuable. -International Family Planning Perspectives, 2006, 32(2):79–88
During the past decade, two demographic trends in developing countries have
received considerable attention: the unprecedented size of the current cohort
of adolescents and the steadily increasing percentage of women infected with
HIV.1 Much of the acceleration in the spread of HIV among women has occurred
among adolescents. In some parts of the world, notably Sub-Saharan Africa, the
prevalence of HIV among women aged 15–24 is two to eight times that among men
in the same age-group.2 In response, policymakers have increasingly sought to
address the reproductive and sexual health needs of adolescents, particularly
female adolescents. Most of the resulting policies and programs, however, pay
surprisingly little attention to the large proportion of female adolescents who
are married.
Child and adolescent
marriage remains common in many parts of the developing world.3 Almost a third
of the more than 330 million girls and young women aged 10–19 who currently
live in developing countries (excluding China) were or will be married by their
18th birthday.4 In the majority of these countries, most of the sexual
intercourse involving female adolescents occurs within marriage.5
Although the risk of HIV
transmission between spouses is extremely low under certain
conditions—specifically, when both partners are uninfected at the time of
marriage and subsequently engage in sexual activity exclusively with each
other—these conditions are often not met. When they are violated, as is
frequently the case for women who marry at a very young age, sexual intercourse
with a spouse is risky. Indeed, in some settings, married adolescents have
higher rates of HIV infection than their sexually active unmarried peers.6
Thus, married female adolescents not only represent a sizable fraction of
adolescents at risk of contracting HIV via heterosexual intercourse, but also a
group with high rates of HIV infection.
Nonetheless, many
policymakers and parents, and even young women themselves, continue to perceive
marriage as a haven from the risk of HIV infection. Parents in Malawi, for
example, encourage their daughters to marry early to protect them from HIV.7
Moreover, many international and national AIDS prevention messages encourage
abstinence until marriage; these messages imply that sex within marriage is not
only more socially sanctioned than premarital sex, but also somehow provides
complete protection against HIV.
In this article, we
present evidence from a series of international surveys about four important
aspects of young women's lives. These data call into question the often deeply
ingrained belief that marriage protects young women from HIV. First, for many
adolescents—particularly the youngest brides—marriage greatly increases their
potential exposure to the virus, because marriage results in a transition from
virginity to frequent unprotected sex. Even among adolescents who are already
sexually active, marriage generally leads to a dramatic rise in the frequency
of unprotected intercourse, especially when pregnancy is desired. Second, the
partners of married female adolescents are typically older—and, by virtue of
their age, more likely to be HIV-positive—than the boyfriends of unmarried
female adolescents. In addition, in polygamous societies, child and adolescent
brides are more likely than older brides to be second or third wives. Third,
women who marry as adolescents receive less formal education and have less
exposure to the media than their unmarried peers, greatly reducing their
opportunities to receive information about HIV/AIDS via these channels and
potentially undermining their ability to negotiate safer sexual practices.
Fourth, in addition to being mounted in venues that are relatively inaccessible
to married adolescents, HIV outreach programs are often geared toward unmarried
adolescents and other groups that are considered to be high-risk. These
programs often promote protection strategies that are either inappropriate for
married adolescents or difficult for them to implement, such as using condoms
or abstaining from sexual activity.
DATA AND METHODS
The data in our analysis
come from Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) conducted between 1996 and 2004
in 22 African countries and seven countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. In each country, a nationally representative
sample of women aged 15–49 was surveyed. The majority of surveys used the DHS+
version of the questionnaire, although an older version (DHS III) was used in
five countries (South Africa,
Niger, Togo, Côte
d'Ivoire and Brazil). These instruments included
identical questions about respondents' demographic and socioeconomic
characteristics, marital status, recent sexual activity, pregnancy intentions
and current contraceptive methods.* There were subtle differences between the
DHS III and DHS+ in the questions regarding age at first sex,† but these
differences have little effect on reports of sexual activity.8
Our analyses focus on the
sexual and social dynamics of 15–19-year-old adolescent females. The majority
of our analyses rely on current status reports from married and sexually active
unmarried young women in this age range; in a few analyses, we used data from
an older cohort of women to avoid censoring younger adolescents who were not
yet married or had not yet completed their schooling. All data are weighted
using the probability sampling weights provided by DHS.
RESULTS
Rates of Early
Marriage and HIV Status
Marriage before age 20 is
common in Sub-Saharan Africa (Table 1).
In all of the African countries we studied, with the notable exception of South Africa,
at least four of every 10 women marry before reaching their 20th birthday. In
Latin America and the Caribbean, between
one-quarter and two-thirds of young women marry during their teenage years.
Some of the national data mask considerable local variation; the proportions of
young women married by age 18 in the Amhara region of Ethiopia (80%; data not shown) and in Kayes, Mali (83%), are
substantially higher than the national rates for those countries (49% and 65%,
respectively).
The HIV status of most
adolescents in Africa and Latin America is
unknown, although a handful of studies suggest that the prevalence of HIV among
married adolescent females is relatively high. In some urban areas of Kenya and Zambia, for example, the prevalence
of HIV infection among married adolescent females is 33% and 27%, respectively,
whereas the prevalence among sexually active unmarried females in these areas
is 22% and 17%.9 Nationally representative samples reveal similar patterns,
albeit at lower infection rates. For example, recent DHS data show that the
prevalence of HIV infection is greater among married female adolescents aged
15–19 than among their unmarried sexually active counterparts in countries such
as Kenya (6.6% vs. 2.5%), Tanzania (3.1% vs. 2.5%) and Cameroon (3.9% vs.
2.0%), although these differences are statistically significant only for Kenya.
Sexual Activity
and Pregnancy Intentions
Table 2 examines the
relationship between marital status and recent unprotected sex among young
women aged 15–19. In all countries except South Africa and Namibia, more than
half of adolescent females who had had unprotected sex (i.e., sex without a
condom) during the previous week were married; in 18 of the 29 countries, more
than 80% were married. These findings reflect both a lower frequency of sexual
activity and greater condom use among unmarried female adolescents than among
married female adolescents. If unmarried adolescents are less likely than their
married peers to report being sexually active, having sex frequently and having
sex without a condom, then our data may overestimate the proportion of
unprotected sexual activity that occurs within marriage; nonetheless, these
numbers suggest that across tremendously diverse cultural settings, marriage
remains the principal relationship context in which adolescent females have
sex.
Table 2 also presents the proportions of
married, unmarried and sexually active unmarried young women who had had
unprotected sex in the previous week. That proportion was strikingly higher
among married adolescents than among unmarried ones. Even when the cohort of
unmarried respondents is restricted to those who were sexually active, the
proportion of adolescents who had had recent unprotected sex was significantly
higher among those who were married than among those who were not.
For many adolescent
wives, the first year of marriage—when couples are often trying to conceive
their first child—may be the most sexually active period in their entire life. Figure 1 (page 82) shows the
frequency of unprotected sex by marital duration among women who married before
age 20 in Burkina Faso, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique and Niger—the five Sub-Saharan
countries with the highest proportion of females 18 or younger who are married
(data for all 29 countries are available upon request). In many African
nations, including most of those in Figure 1, the proportion of adolescent
wives who had had unprotected sex during the previous week declined by 10–20 percentage
points between the first year of marriage and the second. Much of this decline
may be attributable to these women becoming pregnant with or giving birth to
their first child.
Differences in pregnancy
desires‡ may partially explain the differences in the frequency of unprotected
sex between married and unmarried adolescents. To investigate this possibility,
we examined the proportion of adolescents who had had recent unprotected sex by
pregnancy desires and marital status (Table
3, page 83). Although the desire to become pregnant was more
common among adolescents who were married than among those who were unmarried
but sexually active, it does not fully account for the differences in frequency
of unprotected sex: In nearly every country, married adolescents were
significantly more likely than sexually active unmarried adolescents to have
had unprotected sex in the previous week, regardless of pregnancy intentions.
These differences were generally greater among women who did not wish to become
pregnant, particularly in South and East Africa and Latin America, but even
among those actively seeking pregnancy in the next two years, married
adolescents were, on average, about three times§ as likely as unmarried
adolescents to have had unprotected sex in the past week (data not shown).
Characteristics
of Sexual Partners
One reason that married
adolescents are usually thought to have a lower risk of HIV infection than
their unmarried peers is that married adolescents are believed to have fewer
sexual partners. Contrary to expectations, however, in most countries the mean
number of partners reported by married adolescents exceeded the number reported
by sexually experienced unmarried adolescents (Table 4, page 83). There was, however, considerable
variation within countries in the number of sexual partners reported by
unmarried, sexually experienced adolescents; the majority reported having had
one sexual partner in the past year, but up to a quarter were engaging in
"secondary abstinence" (i.e., they had refrained from sex for more
than a year), and a small but potentially quite important proportion reported
having had two or more partners.
This last subgroup of
unmarried young women may be at considerable risk, as recent research suggests
that having multiple partnerships, particularly concurrent ones, is strongly
associated with HIV infection.10 In all countries with available data except
Kenya and Namibia, unmarried female adolescents were more likely than their
married counterparts to report having had two or more sexual partners within
the past year; the proportion of unmarried respondents with multiple partners
ranged from fewer than 1% (Kenya) to almost 19% (Ethiopia).
Despite the lower
proportions of married adolescents having multiple partners, several factors
call into question the relative "safety" of husbands as opposed to
boyfriends.11 First, husbands are, on average, older than boyfriends. Second,
DHS data indicate that in most countries, the age gap between spouses was
larger if the woman married before age 18 (Table 5, page 84). For these women, the average
spousal age difference ranged from 4.7 years in Guatemala
to 14.2 years in Guinea.
The age difference was typically a year or two smaller if the wife was 18 or
older when the marriage began.
Polygamy is widely
practiced in most of Sub-Saharan Africa: In recent cohorts, 25–43% of married
women aged 20–24 in western Africa and roughly 10–15% of those in eastern and
southern Africa were in polygamous marriages.12 The DHS data reveal that in all
countries in Sub-Saharan Africa except Namibia and South Africa (where
adolescent marriage is uncommon), women who married before age 18 were more
likely than older brides to have polygamous husbands (Table 5); in many of these
countries, the difference was substantial.
Restricted Access
to Education and Information
In addition to differing
from their unmarried peers with respect to sexual behaviors and partner
characteristics, married young women also spend less time in school and have
less exposure to the media. As Table 6 (page 85) shows, a woman's age at first
marriage is positively related to her total years of schooling; in all 29
countries, women who married when they were 18 or older had more education than
those who married at a younger age. The starkest difference was in Nigeria, where
women who were at least 18 when they married achieved, on average, 9.3 years of
schooling, while those who married before they were 18 remained in school for
only 2.5 years. Differences in educational attainment by age at first marriage
were evident both in countries with low levels of overall education, such as
Burkina Faso, Ethiopia and Mali, and in countries with higher levels of
education, such as South Africa, Peru and Zimbabwe.
Although schools are one
of the primary venues for HIV education, another route by which messages
concerning reproductive health can reach targeted populations is the media;
once again, however, women who married at an early age were at a striking
disadvantage. In all countries with available data, married adolescents were
significantly less likely than unmarried adolescents to watch television; in
all but one, they were less likely to read the newspaper weekly (Table 6). Differences with respect
to radio exposure were less dramatic but still significant in more than half of
the countries.
Lack of
Appropriate HIV Prevention Strategies
Perhaps because of this
limited access to information about HIV from educators and the media, married
female adolescents were less likely than sexually experienced unmarried female
adolescents to know one or more ways of avoiding HIV (Table 7, page 86). Even
when compared with all unmarried adolescents, many of whom had not yet had sex,
married adolescents were often poorly informed.
Moreover, there appear to
be few protective strategies available and accessible to adolescent wives. In
all 14 countries for which data are available, married adolescents reported
either doing nothing or limiting their sexual activity to one partner (their
husband) as their primary strategy for avoiding HIV infection (data not shown).
Neither of these strategies offers an effective means of reducing the degree of
risk. Although sexually experienced unmarried young women, like their married
counterparts, tended to have only one sexual partner, in several countries they
reported using condoms or abstaining from intercourse as their most common
protective strategy. Among all unmarried young women, the most popular
protective strategies in the overwhelming majority of countries were either to abstain
from sex or to not initiate sexual activity. These options are, for the most
part, not available to young women who are married.
The possibility of
refusing sexual relations within marriage is virtually eliminated in many
instances by the threat of violence. Forty-three percent of married adolescent
women in Ethiopia and 64% of
those in Mali
stated they felt that husbands are justified in beating their wives if the
women withhold sex (results not shown). Coerced sex, particularly coerced first
sex, has been linked to poor reproductive health outcomes for young women,
including increased risk of HIV infection.13
DISCUSSION
We identified four
associations that point to the need for HIV prevention programs that focus on
married adolescents. First, marriage coincides with intensified exposure to
unprotected sex. For a large fraction of young brides in developing countries,
marriage marks the transition from no sexual exposure to regular sexual
relations. Even for those who have engaged in premarital sex, marriage may
result in a dramatic increase in the frequency of unprotected sexual activity.
These changes may be driven in part by the desire for pregnancy.
Second, the husbands of
adolescent wives tend to be much older than their spouses. Because of their
older age, these men are generally more sexually experienced than the
boyfriends of unmarried adolescents; as a result, husbands are, at least in
some settings, more likely than boyfriends to be HIV-positive. In one study,
for example, the male partners of adolescent wives were more likely than the
partners of unmarried adolescents to be infected with HIV in Kisumu, Kenya (30%
vs. 12%), and Ndola, Zambia (32% vs. 17%).14
Nonetheless, it is
possible that husbands are less likely than boyfriends to transmit the virus.15
This argument rests on findings that viral loads and infectivity rates are
quite high in the first few months following infection and then typically
decline until symptoms of AIDS appear.16 If HIV-positive boyfriends, due to
their young age, have been infected more recently than HIV-positive husbands,
then one might expect the infectivity of boyfriends to be higher, on average,
than that of husbands. No reliable data are available to support or refute this
speculation. We note, however, that the prevalence of HIV infection continues
to rise for men in many countries until age 35,17 suggesting that a large
number of new infections occur among men in their late 20s and early 30s—an
age-group that includes the husbands of many adolescents. Clearly, the
relationship between infectivity rates and the age of the male partner warrants
additional research.
Another potentially
important demographic finding is that the absolute age difference between
spouses tends to be larger when women marry before age 18. In general, the
evidence linking large spousal age differences and greater power imbalances
within marriage is weak and sometimes conflicting.18 Nonetheless, a recent
National Academy of Science panel on adolescents in developing countries
concluded that "there is reason to believe that marriages of young women
and older men are less equitable" than other marriages.19 If young women
married to much older husbands have less power in the relationship, then they
may have less ability to negotiate strategies to protect against HIV or to
influence their husbands' behavior, whether his use of condoms within the
marriage, his engagement in extramarital sex or his use of condoms with
non-marital sexual partners. In addition, in Sub-Saharan Africa, young brides
are more likely than older brides to enter into polygamous unions and hence
share their sexual risks with their husbands' other wives.
Third, adolescent wives
have less access than their unmarried counterparts to social and public sources
of information and support.20 Our findings suggest that married young women
spend less time in school—the primary setting for HIV programs—than do
unmarried young women. Similarly, married adolescents are less likely to be
exposed to the mass media, another important source of messages designed to
help curb the spread of HIV. Eliminating these gaps in access to HIV prevention
messages is of vital importance. Moreover, in patrilocal societies, where
females leave their natal villages to live with their husbands, adolescent
wives' contact with former friends and family members may be severely
curtailed. In Amhara, Ethiopia, for example, 15% of married female adolescents
reported having visited with same-sex friends outside the home in the previous
week, compared with 24% of unmarried female adolescents.21 This lack of social
contact may be important, as emerging research suggests that the advice and
experiences of friends and family can have strong, positive effects on the
adoption of reliable HIV prevention strategies.22
Finally, married young
women who are cognizant of HIV risks often rely on remaining faithful to their
husbands—and hoping that their husbands remain faithful to them—as their only
viable protection strategy. Alternative or back-up strategies that are used by
unmarried adolescents, such as refraining from sexual activity or using
condoms, are rarely considered by or even thought feasible for married
adolescents. Currently, recommended strategies for protection and risk
reduction are to abstain from sexual activity, to reduce the frequency of
sexual activity, to change to a safer partner, to use a condom, to know one's
own and one's partner's HIV status and to maintain a mutually monogamous
relationship with an uninfected partner. Younger brides may be willing and
indeed anxious to know their own and their partner's HIV status, but they may
face substantial difficulties obtaining their partner's compliance with testing
and mutual disclosure of results. In addition, although they may be highly
motivated to remain faithful, their ability to influence their husband's sexual
behavior might be minimal.
Limitations
Although many of our
analyses show consistent and significant differences between married and
sexually active unmarried adolescents, we emphasize that these are associations
rather than causal relationships. Being married at a young age is clearly
associated with engaging in frequent unprotected sex, having older sexual
partners and having less exposure to sources of information, but these results
do not prove that getting married causes these differences. One possible
interpretation is that adolescents with these characteristics—for example,
those with limited educational opportunities—are more likely to choose or be
pressured into early marriage. Alternatively, perhaps these associations are
driven by both causal and selection effects.
Measurement error,
particularly for self-reported data, may also bias our results. For example,
whether an adolescent reports herself as being married depends on her interpretation
of marriage, which in many cultures is a complex, sometimes fluid arrangement
open to considerable ambiguity and variation. Despite our reliance on
self-reported data, we found clear differences in sexual behaviors, age of
partners, pregnancy intentions, and other social and economic attributes
associated with marital status.23
Accurate reporting of
sexual behavior, especially among adolescents, is notoriously unreliable.24
Reporting errors may vary systematically by whether or not the respondent is
married. For example, if unmarried young women are more likely than married
ones to underreport their sexual behaviors, then the differences between the
two groups will be overestimated. In Cameroon,
Kenya and Tanzania, 1–2%
of the unmarried adolescents who claimed never to have had sex were
HIV-positive. Although some of these young women may have been infected from
sources other than sex, the magnitude of these numbers suggests that some
unmarried respondents were reluctant to disclose their sexual activity.
Similarly, differences in the number of sexual partners may be underestimated
if married adolescents were less likely than unmarried adolescents to disclose
multiple partnerships. Comparisons between married and unmarried young women
should be interpreted in light of these potential biases.
Finally, both current
status and recall data are subject to bias.25 Current status measures of
adolescents do not take into account that married adolescents tend to be older
than unmarried ones, even within the 15–19-year-old age-group. Recall bias
regarding age at first intercourse and age of first marriage in this age-group
is probably minimal, however, as both events are likely to have occurred
recently.
Policy
Implications
Unmarried young women
with multiple partners have received the lion's share of attention in HIV
prevention programs and continue to require very specific and targeted
strategies. On the other hand, married adolescents—despite facing significant
social and behavioral risks—have been marginalized by adolescent HIV/AIDS
policies and have not been central in reproductive health programs aimed at
adult married women.26 Indeed, in many studies, married female adolescents have
been portrayed as a low-risk group. Providing effective policy and programmatic
interventions for these young women may prove particularly challenging. Yet,
overcoming these challenges is important for at least two reasons. First,
helping these young wives to avoid becoming infected could serve as a critical
firewall, preventing the shift of the HIV epidemic from a concentrated to a
generalized one. In developing countries where HIV is currently prevalent only
among sex workers and their clients, the wives of these clients are frequently
the next group to be infected. Second, although epidemiologic models of HIV
transmission rarely identify young married women as important vectors, most of
these women are at the beginning of their most intensive childbearing period;
thus, protecting them could greatly reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV
as well as dramatically lower the probability of dual-parent orphanhood for
their children.
Prescribing specific
policy or programmatic interventions is beyond the scope of this paper. Each
country (or region within a country) will need to assess the degree and
specific sources of HIV risk for young married women.** Our analyses suggest
that in nearly every country we examined, including several with mature AIDS
epidemics, married adolescents may face higher risks than unmarried adolescents
via greater exposure to unprotected intercourse, large age differences with
their partners and limited access to information. There are two notable
exceptions to this general pattern: South Africa
and Namibia.
In these two countries, fewer than 50% of sexually experienced adolescent
females are married and levels of polygamy are relatively low. Thus, in these
countries, the needs of adolescent wives may not be as great or as pressing as
the needs of unmarried, sexually active young women. In contrast, in some countries
not included in our study, the risk of HIV infection via early marriage may be
particularly high. In India,
for example, the low level of premarital sexual activity and the high
proportion of adolescent females who are married suggest that adolescent sexual
activity occurs primarily within marriage.27 Married monogamous women are
considered to be at low risk. However, one study in urban India found
that 14% of married monogamous women whose only source of risk was their
husband were HIV-positive.28
In short, specific policy
interventions must be tailored to sexual and behavioral profiles of young women
in individual countries. The potential effect of increasing young women's age
at marriage on HIV risk would depend on how the sexual behaviors of these young
women (and their partners) would change. Some policymakers fear that delaying
marriage would be accompanied by an increase in sexual activity among unmarried
adolescents that would more than offset the decline in sexual activity among
married adolescents. However, data from Latin America and Africa
show that although the context in which adolescent sexual relationships occur
has changed over time (from within marriage to before marriage), the overall
percentage of sexually active young women has remained constant, or even
declined slightly, as the age of marriage has risen.29
In countries where child
and adolescent marriage is common and premarital sexual activity among young
women is strongly curtailed, delaying marriage by itself might not result in a
longer interval between sexual debut and marriage and might actually delay the
often involuntary loss of virginity for many young women. Furthermore, in these
countries, delaying the age at marriage until at least 18 might afford these
women the opportunity to extend their education, develop livelihood skills and
strengthen their self-esteem, all of which may help them create healthier and
more stable marital unions when they wed.
In other countries,
making sexual intercourse within marriage safer may be a more important
strategy. The process of getting married can itself be used as an opportunity
to reach both brides and grooms with information about HIV/AIDS and to provide
HIV testing. Both religious and state institutions could incorporate these elements
into the marriage process. Reducing spousal age differences in countries where
men marry much younger brides may also help minimize risks associated with
marriage, as intergenerational sex is believed to play an important role in
perpetuating the HIV epidemic in many countries.30 Although the large age
differences between unmarried young women and their older, wealthier sexual
partners (sometimes referred to as their "sugar daddies"31) have
received much media and research attention in parts of Sub-Saharan Africa, in
reality the age difference between adolescent wives and their husbands is, on
average, much larger than that between unmarried young women and their sexual
partners.32
Finally, our analyses
suggest that the first year of marriage is a period of unusually intense sexual
activity for many women. Targeted outreach programs for the recently married
have been proposed.33 Although the use of condoms within marriage is still
relatively unpopular,34 it could be encouraged as a contraceptive and protective
strategy for newly wed couples seeking to delay childbearing. Helping recently
married couples solidify their unions and adjust to living together could also
help reduce the number of women in one of the highest risk categories, those
who have previously been married.35
The combination of
policies designed to delay marriage until at least age 18 and of policies that
recognize and lower HIV risks within marriage could be instrumental in making
marriage safer. As with unmarried young women, some subgroups of married
adolescents may be at much higher risk than others. Adolescents married to
uninfected partners who remain sexually exclusive face minimal risks, whereas
those married at young ages to much older men who have or have had multiple
partners are acutely vulnerable—especially if these young women are trying to
become pregnant. Policymakers have long sought to reduce adolescent HIV risks
by discouraging risky premarital and extramarital sexual activity; it is time
to also promote concurrent and complementary strategies to reduce adolescent
marital sex and foster safer marital sex practices.
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