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Perceived control and communication about sex: A study of South African families


Bradley Goodnight
Christina Salama
Elizabeth C Grim
Elizabeth R Anthony
Lisa Armistead
Sarah L Cook
Donald Skinner
Yoesrie Toefy

Abstract

Caregiver–youth communication about sex protects youth against HIV/AIDS, and caregivers who believe that sex knowledge is important are more likely to talk to their youth about sex. However, caregivers who experience barriers to communication about sex may not talk to their youth about sex even if the caregiver believes that sex education is important. The Theory of Planned Behaviour predicts that an actor has perceived control is necessary for behavioural change. This study therefore hypothesised that caregivers’ perceived control moderates the relationship between caregiver attitudes about youth sex knowledge and caregiver–youth communication about sex. Results from a sample of 99 female South African caregivers of adolescent (10–14 year old) youth supported our hypothesis, indicating that caregiver attitudes about providing youth with sex knowledge positively predict communication about sex only when caregivers have perceived control. This finding illustrates the importance of perceived control in predicting caregiver–youth communication, and therefore has implications for family-based interventions aimed at improving caregiver–youth communication about sex.

Keywords: HIV, family, caregivers, perceived control, parental attitudes, parent–child communication

African Journal of AIDS Research 2014, 13(1): 31–36

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1608-5906
print ISSN: 1727-9445