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Measuring sexual behaviour: methodological challenges in survey research

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TLDR
The role of different types of study in understanding STI epidemiology is considered and potential sources of measurement error in survey research and strategies for assessing and limiting them are focused on.
Abstract
Series editors J M Stephenson, A Babiker The study of sexual behaviour lies at the heart of understanding the transmission dynamics of sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Academic investigation into sexual behaviour dates back to the 18th century and, over time, has employed a variety of approaches including the medical and psychiatric investigation of sexual disorders, anthropological investigations, and survey research based largely on volunteer samples. More recent studies, driven largely by the public health response to HIV/AIDS, have focused on large scale probability sample survey research.1–5 Key areas of inquiry have shifted towards describing population patterns of risk behaviours for STI/HIV transmission, understanding how epidemics of STIs are generated, and informing disease control strategies. Sexual behaviour is a largely private activity, subject to varying degrees of social, cultural, religious, moral and legal norms and constraints. A key challenge for all sex survey research is to generate unbiased and precise measures of individual and population behaviour patterns. Methods are needed to minimise measurement error which may be introduced by participation bias, recall and comprehension problems, and respondents' willingness to report sensitive and sometimes socially censured attitudes or behaviours.6, 7 This paper briefly considers the role of different types of study in understanding STI epidemiology. It then focuses on potential sources of measurement error in survey research and strategies for assessing and limiting them.Sex Transm Inf 2001;77:84–92 The type of study chosen will depend on the purpose of the investigation. However, studies generally fall into four main groups: general population surveys, studies on population subgroups, partner and network studies, ethnographic and qualitative studies. ### GENERAL POPULATION PROBABILITY SAMPLE SURVEYS Cross sectional population surveys aim to describe the overall distribution of behaviours in populations. By using probability sampling techniques and maximising response rates, large scale behavioural surveys can provide robust estimates of the prevalence …

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Study of Sexuality and Health among Older Adults in the United States

TL;DR: Men and women who rated their health as being poor were less likely to be sexually active and, among respondents who were sexually active, were more likely to reportSexual problems are frequent among older adults, but these problems are infrequently discussed with physicians.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Social Organization of Sexuality: Sexual Practices in the United States

Virginia A. Sadock
- 22 Feb 1995 - 
TL;DR: This survey of sexual practices in the United States has been combed by the media for items of interest to the public: monogamous sex is much more widespread in this country than has been thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling dynamic and network heterogeneities in the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.

TL;DR: An intuitive mathematical framework is developed to deal with the heterogeneities implicit within contact networks and those that arise because of the infection process, and these models are compared with full stochastic simulations and show excellent agreement across a wide range of parameters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex, health, and years of sexually active life gained due to good health: evidence from two US population based cross sectional surveys of ageing

TL;DR: Sexual activity, good quality sexual life, and interest in sex were higher for men than for women and this gender gap widened with age and was positively associated with health in middle age and later life.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between methamphetamine and popper use and risk of HIV seroconversion in the multicenter AIDS cohort study

TL;DR: Further examination of the mechanisms underlying the synergism of drug use and sexual risk behaviors on rates of HIV seroconversion is necessary for the development of new targeted HIV prevention strategies for nonmonogamous drug-using MSM.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Adolescent sexual behavior, drug use, and violence: increased reporting with computer survey technology

TL;DR: Estimates of the prevalence of male-male sex, injection drug use, and sexual contact with intravenous drug users were higher when audio-CASI was used and increased reporting was also found for several other risk behaviors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Social Organization of Sexuality: Sexual Practices in the United States

Virginia A. Sadock
- 22 Feb 1995 - 
TL;DR: This survey of sexual practices in the United States has been combed by the media for items of interest to the public: monogamous sex is much more widespread in this country than has been thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

Asking sensitive questions the impact of data collection mode, question format, and question context

TL;DR: The authors compared three methods of collecting data about sexual behaviors and other sensitive topics: com- puter-assisted personal interviewing (CAPI), computer-assisted self-administered interviewing, and audio computer assisted self-directed interviewing (ACASI) with an area probability sample of more than 300 adults in Cook County, Illinois.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methodological problems in AIDS behavioral research: influences on measurement error and participation bias in studies of sexual behavior.

TL;DR: This article reviews and integrates current literature on measurement error and participation bias in sex research, with an emphasis on collecting sexual information in the context of AIDS.
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