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July 2010
FAD Library (Be in the
Know Button)
Before First Sex: Gender differences in
Emotional Relationships and Physical Behaviors Among Adolescents in the Philippines
Ushma D. Upadhay, Michelle J. Hindin and Socorro Gultiano
CONTEXT: Early age at first sex has been identified as a
risk factor for unplanned pregnancy and HIV infection. How-ever, the emotional
relationships and physical behaviors that precede first intercourse, and how
they differ by sex, also may provide important cues about how to prevent sexual
risk behavior.
METHODS: The pre-coital activities of 2,051 adolescents
aged 17–19 in Cebu, Philippines, are examined using
1998–2000 and 2002 data from the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey.
The timing and tempo of emotional relationships and physical behaviors for
males and females are described. Cox proportional hazards models are used to
identify the characteristics associated with age at first sex.
RESULTS: Males engage in precoital physical behaviors
and first sex at younger ages than females. Although the standard order in
which the two sexes engage in emotional relationships for the first time is the
same, males progress through the sequence more quickly than females. After
adolescents have progressed through the sequence of emotional relationships,
there is a gap of a least a year before they begin to have sex. In the
multivariate analysis, rapid progression through the sequence of emotional
relationships was associated with initiating sex at a younger age for females
(hazard ratio, 1.5), but not for males.
CONCLUSION: The period between first date and first
sex experienced by both males and females provides an opportunity to ensure
that adolescents have access to the information and services that will allow
them to make informed choices about sexual behavior.
International Family Planning Perspectives,
2006, 32(3):110–119
Studying the progression toward first sexual
intercourse could improve the understanding of adolescent sexuality in the
developing world and aid in identifying and preventing the risky sexual
behaviors young people engage in. Studies in the developing world point to
early age at first sex as a risk factor for HIV infection and unplanned
pregnancy.1 It is
likely, however, that poor reproductive health outcomes are predicted by
factors that can be measured before first sex.
Miller and colleagues argue that the category of
not being sexually active is too broad and that studying the behaviors that
adolescents engage in before first sex can provide useful insight into their
potential risk.2 For
example, their cross-sectional study of U.S. adolescents aged 14–17 who had not
had sex found that those who engaged in more precoital behaviors, such as
kissing and petting, were significantly more likely to anticipate having sex in
the next year than were those who did not engage in any precoital behaviors.
Studying the pace at which adolescents progress through increasingly more
intimate precoital behaviors also helps anticipate when adolescents will first
have sexual intercourse. Smith and Udry suggest that in cultures with normative
expectations of a lengthy precoital period, adolescents tend to be better
prepared for first sexual intercourse.3
The sequence of precoital behaviors that
adolescents experience is generally consistent. Data from the 1994 Young Adult
Fertility Survey, a national study of Filipino adolescents, show that
adolescents first had crushes, then had admirers or began admiring others, had
their first group date, had their first boyfriend or girlfriend, and finally had
their first single date.4
Studies in several other cultures have shown
similar patterns. Adolescents experience these behavioral milestones, however,
at different ages in different cultures. Further, males and females initiate
specific precoital behaviors at different ages, with males doing so
substantially earlier than females in most countries.5
Studies in Malaysia, Korea, Hong Kong and Slovenia6 confirm that most
adolescents gradually progress through a sequence of precoital activities, and
that there are large differences between the sexes. For example, in a cross-
sectional survey in Malaysia, 45% of the 1,181
participating adolescents had dated. Of those who had dated, almost 60% of
males and 17% of females had kissed and necked, almost 50% of males and 10% of
females had engaged in petting, and 27% of males and 5% of females had had
sexual intercourse.7 A
1996–1997 Hong Kong study among 4,116 heterosexual students found a gradual
progression from holding hands, kissing and caressing to sexual intercourse. As
in Malaysia, males were more likely
than females to have engaged in every behavior examined.8
Although the Malaysian study was
community-based, the studies in Korea, Hong Kong and Slovenia used data collected
from surveys done in schools. A limitation of studies done among students is
that they may underestimate the true prevalence of precoital behaviors because
those who are absent from or have dropped out of school may be more likely to
have engaged in these behaviors.9 The
pres-ent study is community-based, and includes adolescents both in and out of
school.
This analysis has several goals: First, we aim
to understand the precoital behaviors of Filipino adolescents, including the
prevalence of emotional relationships (crushes, courtships, romantic
relationships and dating) and precoital physical behaviors (holding hands,
kissing and petting), and how males and females differ. We hypothesize that
males engage in each precoital behavior earlier than females and progress
through behaviors at a faster pace. Second, we want to determine whether there
is a consistent sequence of precoital behaviors; we hypothesize that a single,
predominant pattern will emerge. Finally, we aim to discover whether
progressing through types of emotional relationships quickly is related to the
timing of first sex. We hypothesize that adolescents who progress through types
of emotional relationships more quickly have sex earlier than peers who do not.
Gender and
Sexual Behavior in the Philippines
Both the timing of first sexual intercourse and
the factors that influence it differ between males and females in many
countries around the world. Most studies in developing countries, particularly
in Asia, find that males become sexually active earlier than
females because of greater tolerance for premarital sexual behavior for males.10 A
review of research on the risk and protective factors for early sexual
initiation found that in eight of the 10 studies that included gender in their
models, males were significantly more likely to have had sex than females.11 Although this review did not examine the reasons males have sex earlier than
females, in the countries studied, this practice is often acceptable.
Expectations about sexuality differ sharply for
females and males in the Philippines. Males are encouraged
to engage in sexual activities.12 They
initiate dating and sexual activities earlier than females, and are allowed
more sexual freedom; many Filipino youth consider it natural for males to have
multiple partners. In contrast, social norms about young women's behavior tend
to be conservative. Females are expected to control and set limits on male
sexuality.13 Philippine society continues to uphold the value of hiya, or shame,
which strongly influences female behavior.14 Young people believe that females should adhere to strict roles in
dating; subtle flirting is acceptable, but the outright wooing of men is not.
In the Philippines, premarital sex is
generally not approved of for women, even during the engagement period;15 the
majority of Filipina women have sex for the first time after marriage.
Nevertheless, premarital sex is becoming more common, especially in urban
areas, as are many other behaviors, such as dating and kissing.16
Group dating is a common way for Filipino youth
to initiate acquaintances with the opposite sex, particularly in urban areas.17 Usually, adolescents begin to go out on group dates at ages 13–16, and then go
on single dates a couple of years later.18 National data from 2002 reveal that by age 19, 43% of single women and 48% of
single men have ever had a boyfriend or girlfriend; those figures increase to
72% and 76%, respectively, by age 24.19
The median age at first sex in the Philippines is relatively high when
compared with developed countries and many other developing countries.20 National data, however, suggest it may be declining. According to the Young
Adult Fertility and Sexuality Survey, the median age at first sex for all
adolescents was 18.0 in both 1982 and 1994, but was 17.5 in 2002.21
Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data find
later ages at first sex, probably because the survey measures age at first sex
among females only. In 1993, the reported median age at first intercourse among
women aged 25–29 was 22.3; 10 years later, by 2003, it was 22.1.22 In
2003 (when the DHS interviewed men as well), the reported median age at first
sex was 21.0 among men aged 25–29.
METHODS
Study Setting
Cebu, an island in the Central Visayas region, is one of the
most developed provinces in the Philippines. The study area, Metro
Cebu, is a major port city and the second-largest metropolitan area in the
country, with a population of almost 1.7 million in 2000. Metro Cebu accounts for 15% of the
land area and 44% of the population of the entire province. Although Cebu is not as modern a city
as Metro Manila, it embodies most of the characteristics of highly urbanized
(and fast urbanizing) areas in the Philippines.
Data Collection
The Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition
Survey (CLHNS) provides the data for the present study. The survey provides
data from an ongoing study of a cohort of more than 3,000 Filipina women who
gave birth between May 1, 1983, and April 30, 1984. The CLHNS followed these women and their
newborns (the index children) in Metro Cebu. Follow-up surveys were conducted
in 1991–1992, 1994–1995, 1998–2000 and 2002. The CLHNS follow-up surveys in
1998–2000 and 2002 also included extensive interviews with the then-adolescent
index children. Because of survey implementation issues, the 1998–2000 round of
the CLHNS was conducted first with all the female adolescents and then with
males.
All rounds of the survey were conducted as
approved by the University of North Carolina School of Public Health
institutional review board for research involving human subjects; the 2002
survey was also approved by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Committee on Human Research.
The adolescents in the sample have become
geographically dispersed since the 1983–1984 baseline survey and now live in
172 different communities (barangays) scattered throughout Cebu
province. Most adolescents were interviewed in their homes. On average, each
interview took two sessions, for a total of 2.5 hours, to complete. In some
cases, it took the interviewers several visits to the original household or to
other households to complete an interview.
The 1998–2000 survey included 2,117 adolescents.
By 2002, 101 of these adolescents were lost to follow-up, primarily because of
out-migration. In the 2002 survey, however, 35 adolescents who had not been
interviewed in the 1998–2000 survey were located and returned to the sample.
The final sample in 2002 thus included 2,051 adolescents.
Instruments
Both the 1998–2000 and 2002 adolescent surveys
asked respondents whether they had experienced several types of emotional
relationships: crushes, courting, romantic relationships and dating. The
1998–2000 survey asked only those adolescents who had ever had a romantic
relationship about all physical behaviors (holding hands, kissing, petting and
sexual intercourse) because of concerns over asking young adolescents sexually
explicit questions; those who had never had a relationship were asked only if
they had held hands. In 2002, however, all respondents were asked if they had
engaged in each of the physical behaviors.
Unlike studies of precoital behaviors in other
countries, the CLHNS includes questions that focus on emotional relationships
(i.e., courting, dating, etc.), in addition to particular sexual activities
(i.e., kissing, petting, etc.), thus providing richer data. In addition, the
adolescents were asked to define the various emotional relationships asked
about in the survey, and their responses from 2002 are reported here.
Adolescents were asked open-ended questions such as, "What do you
understand by courtship?" The responses were collected, categorized and
then coded by native Cebuano speakers. Definitions for each emotional
relationship reported by the adolescents were grouped into general categories.
A categorical variable was created, with each category representing a different
definition; chi-square testing was done to compare each categorical variable
between females and males.
Independent variables include the order and pace
of progression through types of emotional relationships. Models adjust for a
set of social and demographic variables that includes a household wealth index
(based on Filmer and Pritchett's index),23 whether the adolescent lived in a rural area, frequency of church attendance
and highest grade completed.
Data Analysis
The data analysis was done in three parts.
First, we examined the respondents' progression through emotional relationships
and physical behaviors. Second, we analyzed the timing and tempo of this
progression. In this step, Kaplan-Meier plots were used to show the age in
years at which respondents experienced their first crush, courtship, romantic
relationship, date and sexual intercourse.
We created scales to assess the order and pace
of adolescents' movement through emotional relationships and physical
behaviors. The scale assessing order was created by looking at the age at which
each adolescent first experienced each type of emotional relationship (as reported
when they were aged 17–19). These reported ages were then used to establish the
order in which each adolescent experienced the different types of emotional
relationships. The number of adolescents following each distinct order was
calculated; the order that was most common was considered the dominant one. The
scale assessing tempo, or how quickly males and females moved through types of
relationships, divided the adolescents into three categories: Those who had
experienced only 0–2 emotional relationships (in their lifetime), those who had
experienced 3–4 emotional relationships slowly (over more than one year) and
those who had experienced 3–4 emotional relationships quickly (within one
year).
Bivariate analyses were conducted to examine the
characteristics associated with ever having had sex, and multivariate survival
analysis was conducted to examine the characteristics associated with males'
and females' age at first sex, taking into account the effects of selected
social and demographic factors.
The Cox proportional hazards models control led
for such demographic variables as wealth, urban residence, church attendance
and highest grade of school completed. All analyses were done separately for
males and females. Standard errors in the analysis were adjusted for clustering
based on community of residence. All analyses were conducted using STATA
version 7.24
RESULTS
The final sample included 1,110 males and 1,007
fe- males aged 14–16 in 1998–2000 and 1,089 males and 962 females aged 17–19 in
2002. Table 1 shows
selected characteristics of the sample in both years. The only variable that demonstrated
unanticipated differences over time was church attendance: Rates fell
significantly between survey rounds. In addition, a sizable gender gap was
evident in both rounds, with significantly more females reporting frequent
church attendance than males. In 2002, females had significantly more years of
education than males.
Emotional Relationships
Table 2 shows the
percentage of adolescents who reported engaging in specific emotional
relationships and physical behaviors. Gender differences in reports of
emotional relationships were apparent in the 1998–2000 survey, when the males
were interviewed later than the females. Many of the differences found in
1998–2000 were no longer significant in 2002, when males and females were
interviewed at the same age.
For example, at ages 14–16, 82% of males and 87%
of females reported having had a crush on someone of the opposite sex; crushes
were reported by almost all respondents at ages 17–19. When asked at ages 17–19
to define a crush, about 40% of both males and females said that it is an
attraction to or fascination with attitudes, physical aspects, abilities or
talents in another person. About 45% of males and 26% of females said it was a
liking or fondness for another person, and 9% of males and 28% of females said
a crush is admiration or appreciation of another. Overall, the distribution of
the definitions differed significantly between males and females (p≤.001; data
not shown).
Between ages 14–16 and 17–19, the proportion of
adolescents who reported having courted someone or having been courted
increased from 36% to 83% among males and from 43% to 91% among females.
Differences between males and females were significant in both surveys, with
females significantly more likely to report having been courted. When asked at
ages 17–19 to define courting, 19% of males and 28% of females said it was
liking, being fond of or attracted to a girl or boy, and 19% of males and 15%
of females said it was expressing one's feelings toward the person one liked;
the distribution of the definitions was significantly different between males
and females (p≤.001; data not shown).
About 34% of males and 18% of females reported
having had a romantic relationship by ages 14–16, a difference that was
significant. This proportion rose to 75% of both males and females by ages
17–19. Among the females who reported having been in a romantic relationship by
ages 17–19, 84% had older partners. Among those who reported having been in a
romantic relationship (not shown), similar proportions of the males (63%) and
females (60%) reported ever having had one or two romantic partners; the rest
reported more. Two males and one female reported having a cumulative total of 20
or more romantic partners.
The proportion of males who reported ever having
been on a date increased from 35% at ages 14–16 to 72% at ages 17–19. For
females, those proportions were 23% and 69%, respectively. At ages 14–16,
significantly fewer females reported having been on a date than males but when
asked again at ages 17–19, the difference was no longer significant. When asked
what they understood by the word "date," 35% of males and 34% of
females said it meant going out alone with a boyfriend or girlfriend, and 27%
of both males and females reported a date was simply talking alone with
boyfriend or girlfriend. Another 13% of males and 18% of females said it was
going out and talking with an admirer. Once again, the distribution of the
definitions differed significantly between males and females (p≤.001; data not
shown).
In 2002, 67% of males and 46% of females
reported that their first date had been unchaperoned (p≤.001; data not shown).
Females were significantly more likely than males to report that their first
date had been chaperoned (18% vs. 10%; p≤.001), and were also significantly
more likely to report that their first date had occurred as part of a group
(36% vs. 23%; p≤.001).
The specific activities of first dates varied
widely, but the most common one was going to the mall, plaza or school ground
and eating together, with 29% of females and 23% of males who had ever been on
a date reporting having done so. A significantly higher proportion of males
than females reported just talking on their first date (25% vs. 17%). Just 10%
of males and 12% of females reported going to a movie alone on their first date
(data not shown).
Physical Behaviors
There were also significant differences between
males and females in the reported experience of physical behaviors (Table 2). At ages
14–16, 37% of males and 27% of females reported having held hands. At ages
17–19, these proportions were similar—89% and 88%, respectively. Because
information on other physical behaviors was not collected from the full sample
in the earlier survey, we report only the 2002 data. In that survey, each of
these behaviors was reported by a significantly higher percentage of males than
females. Among males, 72% reported ever having kissed and 54% reported having
engaged in petting; among females, those proportions were 65% and 34%,
respectively. Twenty-five percent of the sample (data not shown) reported ever
having had sex, with significantly more males reporting having done so than
females (31% vs. 20%).
Of those who reported having had sex, 97% of
females and 52% of males reported that their first time was with their
boyfriend or girlfriend. For 5% of males and 2% of females, their first time
was with someone who had previously been a romantic partner, and 39% of males
and fewer than 1% of females said it was with someone with whom they did not
have an emotional relationship (unpaid). Finally, 4% of males and no females
said they had paid for their first sexual encounter. Among those who reported
having had sex, 24% of males and 37% of females said they had had sex for the
first time at their partner's house, while 13% of males and 28% of females said
they had had sex for the first time at their own homes; 12% of both males and
females said they had first had sex at a rented cottage, hotel, inn or brothel
(data not shown).
Timing and
Tempo of Relationships and First Sex
Figures 1 and 2 show the proportions of males
and females by the age at which they first engaged in each type of emotional
relationship and in sexual intercourse, as reported in 2002. Both males' and
females' reported first crushes occurred well before other types of
relationships. In general, males and females reported experiencing their first
courtship, their first romantic relationship and their first date within a few
years of one another. Tests for significance determined that the curves for
first crush, first courtship and first sex for males were significantly
different from those for females (p≤.001).
Median ages were 14 for males and 13 for females
at first crush, 16 for males and 15 for females at first courtship, 16 for both
sexes at first romantic relationship, and 16 for males and 17 for females at
first date. The reported median age at first intercourse was not estimated
because at least half of the sample had not yet experienced intercourse. The
median number of years between reported first crush and first date was two
years for males and four years for females (Table 3, page
113).
In general, there was more time between events
for females than for males. There was a considerable amount of time between
reported first crush and first sex for both sexes, but this gap was even longer
for females than for males. These results suggest that when adolescents begin
engaging in emotional relationships, sexual intercourse tends to follow after
several years.
According to the emotional relationships scale
constructed with 2002 data, 87% of males and 83% of females experienced
emotional relationships in a particular order: They first experienced crushes,
then courting, romantic relationships and dating (Table 4). Males
and females differed significantly in the number of emotional relationships
they had experienced in order. For example, significantly more males than
females experienced a crush before courting, a romantic relationship or dating.
Almost 12% of males and 16% of females had
experienced emotional relationships in an order other than the dominant one.
Many reported not having experienced all of the emotional relationships stages
yet, but a clear pattern was still apparent. Females who followed other
patterns were about half as likely to have ever had sex as females who followed
the dominant order (odds ratio, 0.5; p=.01, not shown), but this was not seen
among males. The majority of adolescents who followed patterns other than the dominant
ones reported experiencing their first date before their first romantic
relationship, which is fairly common in other countries. Among the 127 males
who followed patterns other than the dominant one, 95% reported experiencing
their first date before their first relationship. Among the 151 females who
went out of order, 91% reported experiencing their first date before their
first relationship.
Many of the adolescents reported experiencing
several of these emotional relationships for the first time in a single year.
Similar proportions of males and females reported having experienced only 0–2
emotional relationships in their lifetime (Figure 3). Among
those who reported experiencing 3–4 emotional relationships, males were
significantly more likely than females to experience them quickly: More than
49% of males and 32% of females were considered to be progressing through types
of relationships quickly.
Characteristics
Associated with Delayed Sex
The effect of experiencing emotional
relationships quickly on having sex at an early age was examined among males
and females separately. Taking age into account, we therefore ran Cox
proportional hazards models to identify the factors associated with the risk of
having sex.
In Table 5 (page
116), Model 1 shows the unadjusted association between the pace of progression
through types of emotional relationships and the hazard of having had sex at
any given age for males and females. The middle category, 3–4 emotional
relationships experienced slowly, is the reference group. Males who had
experienced 0–2 emotional relationships in their lifetime were significantly
less likely to have had sex than males who had experienced 3–4 emotional
relationships slowly (hazard ratio, 0.1). Males who had experienced 3–4
emotional relationships quickly were more likely to have had sex than males who
had experienced the same number of emotional relationships slowly (hazard ratio,
1.2), but this association was not significant at the p≤.05 level and the
effect dissipated when social and demographic variables were added to the model
(Model 2). After adjustment for these variables, the strength and magnitude of
the effect of having few emotional relationships remained. In addition, for
males, living in rural areas (hazard ratio, 0.6) and having achieved more
education (hazard ratio, 0.9) were associated with a lower risk of first sex at
a given age.
Among females, the pace of progression through
types of emotional relationships and the hazard of having had sex at a given
age were also associated. Model 1 shows that females who had experienced
emotional relationships quickly were at a significantly increased risk of
having had sex than females who had experienced 3–4 types of relationships
slowly. The hazard ratio for females who experienced only 0–2 relationships was
0 because none of those females reported ever having had sex. When social and
demographic variables were added to the model, the association between a fast
progression through types of relationships and the hazard of having sex
remained (hazard ratio, 1.5). Model 2 shows that females who attended church
frequently were about 40% less likely to have had sex than females of the same
age who did not attend frequently (hazard ratio, 0.6). In addition, for each
additional year of education, adolescents' hazard of having sex at any given
age was reduced by 17% (hazard ratio, 0.8).
DISCUSSION
This study found significant differences in
precoital behavior between adolescent males and females in the Philippines. Females experienced
some emotional relationships at younger ages than did males, but males
progressed through types of relationships at a faster pace than females. As in other
countries in Asia,25 males engaged in precoital physical behaviors and sexual intercourse at younger
ages than females did.
The finding that females who moved quickly through
types of emotional relationships were at a significantly higher risk of having
sex at a younger age than those who did not suggests that those who move
quickly through different types of emotional relationships probably move
quickly through physical behaviors as well. For males, experiencing emotional
relationships quickly is not associated with an increased risk of having sex at
a younger age, perhaps because many males are having sex outside of their
emotional relationships.
Most adolescents in the Philippines advanced through
relationships in an ordered progression—experiencing crushes, courtships,
romantic relationships, dating and then sexual intercourse, a pattern similar
to that found in a national study and elsewhere.26 It
is possible that males' and females' differing definitions of emotional
relationships affect how they report experiencing them; this may explain some
of the differences between males and females.
Although most adolescents in the Philippines followed a standard
sequence in their emotional relationships, some—particularly females—followed a
different sequence. Following a nonstandard sequence was not associated with
younger age at first sex. Females who experienced emotional relationships in a
nonstandard order had significantly fewer romantic relationships than those who
experienced emotional relationships in the expected order (p=0.04). Therefore,
following a nonstandard order should not be considered a risk behavior.
Adolescents in the Philippines begin their physical
relationships later than adolescents in other developing countries,27 which is apparent in this sample. Among both males and females who had had sex,
median age at first sex was 17; however, not even half of the sample had had
sex. By the time all have had sex, the median age at first sex in this sample
will likely be at least one or two years older than it would be if calculated
now.
The precoital behaviors of the adolescents in
this sample reveal important cues about their future sexual activity. Most
males and females had crushes early on, and a few years later they engaged in
courting, dating and romantic relationships, all around the same time. It is
not until a few years later that they engaged in sexual intercourse. Females
started to have emotional relationships earlier than did males, and they waited
longer to have sex. As Smith and Udry proposed, engaging in precoital behaviors
over an extended period of time may allow the adolescent to become prepared
mentally and emotionally for sexual intercourse, as well as to obtain
contraceptive protection.28 This
period before an adolescent begins to have sex also offers parents, schools and
adolescent health programs an opportunity to help adolescents make informed
choices about sexual intercourse.
One of the primary limitations of the current
research is that all data come from adolescent self-reports, and may be subject
to recall bias or social desirability bias. Because of the strong conservative
culture in the Philippines, the self-reported data
may not reflect true behavior. Many females may be uncomfortable discussing
their sexual behavior, and thus underreport it. Young men, on the other hand,
may overreport their sexual experiences to give the impression that they are
conforming to societal expectations.29
Because the adolescent participants have been
involved in this longitudinal survey for almost two decades, the interviewers
have established a strong rapport with them. Although the respondents may be
embarrassed to report their sexual behaviors to someone they know well, the
interviewers have been trained to reassure the adolescents that their responses
will be kept confidential.
The findings in the present study can be checked
against the results from other studies of Filipino adolescents. According to
national data collected in 2002, much lower proportions—26% of males and 9% of
females aged 17–19—reported ever having had sex.30 An
unpublished survey using a self-administered questionnaire among 1,196 students
aged 15–24 in Dumagu |