Women's Self-efficacy and Sexually Transmitted Disease Preventive Behaviors
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Knowledge of sexually transmitted disease (STD) prevention, perceived risk for STDs, and self-efficacy for STD prevention were investigated as predictors of behavioral risk for STDs in 308 female college students. Perceived risk and self-efficacy predicted 19% of behavioral risk for STD; knowledge was not a predictor. Self-efficacy was highest for communicating about STD prevention and lowest for refusing sexual intercourse. Interventions that enhance both women's self-efficacy to prevent STDs and accurate risk appraisal are likely to be more effective than those that emphasize only knowledge of prevention techniques.
Predictors of condom use self-efficacy in an ethnically diverse university sample.
Farmer M, Meston C Arch Sex Behav. 2006; 35(3):313-26.
PMID: 16804746 PMC: 2859307. DOI: 10.1007/s10508-006-9027-5.