4.4 Article

The Prevalence of Using Pornography for Information About How to Have Sex: Findings from a Nationally Representative Survey of US Adolescents and Young Adults

Journal

ARCHIVES OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 50, Issue 2, Pages 629-646

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10508-020-01877-7

Keywords

Adolescent; Sexuality; Pornography; Sex education; Sexually explicit media

Funding

  1. Church & Dwight Co., Inc.
  2. Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington

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The study found that parents and friends were the most helpful sources of information for adolescents aged 14-17, rather than pornography. However, for young adults aged 18-24, pornography was the most commonly endorsed helpful source. This suggests differences in information preferences regarding sexual education between adolescents and young adults.
We analyzed cross-sectional data collected from a U.S. nationally representative survey of individuals ages 14-24 years old on what sources of information from the past year they considered to be the most helpful about how to have sex (n = 600 adolescents ages 14-17 years old, and n = 666 young adults ages 18-24 years old). Among the 324 adolescents who indicated that they had been helped by at least one source of information, helpful information was most likely to have come from parents (31.0%) and friends (21.6%). Only 8.4% of adolescents said pornography was helpful. However, for those in the 18-24-year-old age group, pornography was the most commonly endorsed helpful source (24.5%), as compared to other possible options such as sexual partners, friends, media, and health care professionals. Multivariable regression analyses revealed that indicating that pornography was the most helpful source of information about how to have sex, compared to the other sources, was inversely associated with being female (OR = 0.32, p = .001), inversely associated with identifying as bisexual compared to heterosexual (OR = 0.15, p = .038), positively associated with being Black compared to being white non-Hispanic (OR = 4.26, p = .021), inversely associated with reporting a household income of either $25 K to $49,999 (OR = 0.31, p = .010) or $50 K to $74,999 (OR = 0.36, p = .019) compared to more than $75 K, and positively associated with having masturbated (OR = 13.20, p = .005). Subsequent research should investigate the role of pornography in both adolescent and adult sexual development, including why one-quarter of U.S. young adults say that pornography is a helpful source of information about how to have sex and what they think that they are learning from it.

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