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Annual Review of Sex Research Special Issue

21st Century Parent–Child Sex Communication in the United States: A Process Review

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Pages 532-548 | Published online: 06 Jan 2017
 

Abstract

Parent–child sex communication results in the transmission of family expectations, societal values, and role modeling of sexual health risk-reduction strategies. Parent–child sex communication’s potential to curb negative sexual health outcomes has sustained a multidisciplinary effort to better understand the process and its impact on the development of healthy sexual attitudes and behaviors among adolescents. This review advances what is known about the process of sex communication in the United States by reviewing studies published from 2003 to 2015. We used the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), PsycINFO, SocINDEX, and PubMed, and the key terms “parent child” AND “sex education” for the initial query; we included 116 original articles for analysis. Our review underscores long-established factors that prevent parents from effectively broaching and sustaining talks about sex with their children and has also identified emerging concerns unique to today’s parenting landscape. Parental factors salient to sex communication are established long before individuals become parents and are acted upon by influences beyond the home. Child-focused communication factors likewise describe a maturing audience that is far from captive. The identification of both enduring and emerging factors that affect how sex communication occurs will inform subsequent work that will result in more positive sexual health outcomes for adolescents.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to acknowledge the assistance of Drs. Sharron Docherty, Michael Relf, and Ross McKinney for feedback on an earlier version of the manuscript. The authors would also like to thank Ms. Adrianne Leonardelli who, at the time of the study, was a health information specialist at the Duke University Medical Library.

Funding

Dr. Flores would like to acknowledge funding assistance from the Surgeon General C. Everett Koop HIV/AIDS Research Grant and from the National Institutes of Health’s Ruth Kirschstein National Research Service Award (F31NR015013).

Additional information

Funding

Flores would like to acknowledge funding assistance from the Surgeon General C. Everett Koop HIV/AIDS Research Grant and from the National Institutes of Health’s Ruth Kirschstein National Research Service Award (F31NR015013) and Research on Vulnerable Women, Children, and Families (T32NR007100).

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