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Oral sex and condom use among young people in the United Kingdom.


Much research into young people's sexual behavior sexual behavior A person's sexual practices–ie, whether he/she engages in heterosexual or homosexual activity. See Sex life, Sexual life.  in the United Kingdom has focused on describing levels of prevalence of, and understanding the factors associated with, early sexual activity and contraceptive contraceptive /con·tra·cep·tive/ (-sep´tiv)
1. diminishing the likelihood of or preventing conception.

2. an agent that so acts.
 use, including condom 1. condom - The protective plastic bag that accompanies 3.5-inch microfloppy diskettes. Rarely, also used of (paper) disk envelopes. Unlike the write protect tab, the condom (when left on) not only impedes the practice of SEX but has also been shown to have a high failure  use. Indeed, young people's sexual behavior has been closely monitored since the publication in 1999 of the Social Exclusion social exclusion
Noun

Sociol the failure of society to provide certain people with those rights normally available to its members, such as employment, health care, education, etc.
 Unit's report Teenage Pregnancy teenage pregnancy Adolescent pregnancy, teen pregnancy Social medicine Pregnancy by a ♀, age 13 to 19; TP is usually understood to occur in a ♀ who has not completed her core education–secondary school, has few or no marketable skills, is , which established the target of halving the 1998 rate of conceptions among women aged 15-17 by 2010. (1)

In 2001, partly in response to huge increases in new gonorrhea gonorrhea (gŏnərē`ə), common infectious disease caused by a bacterium (Neisseria gonorrhoeae), involving chiefly the mucous membranes of the genitourinary tract.  and chlamydia chlamydia (kləmĭd`ēə), genus of microorganisms that cause a variety of diseases in humans and other animals. Psittacosis, or parrot fever, caused by the species Chlamydia psittaci,  diagnoses since 1995, (2) the English National Sexual Health and HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  Strategy was launched; this plan proposed substantial changes in the delivery of sexual health services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract  and set targets for reductions in new cases of HIV and other STDs. (3) Obviously, ongoing research into young people's sexual behavior and condom use is highly relevant to this effort; however, protective practices during penetrative pen·e·tra·tive  
adj.
1. Tending to penetrate; penetrant.

2. Displaying keen insight; acute.

Adj. 1. penetrative
 vaginal vag·i·nal
adj.
1. Of or relating to the vagina.

2. Relating to or resembling a sheath.



vaginal

pertaining to the vagina, the tunica vaginalis testis, or to any sheath.
 and anal intercourse Noun 1. anal intercourse - intercourse via the anus, committed by a man with a man or woman
anal sex, buggery, sodomy

sexual perversion, perversion - an aberrant sexual practice;
 should not be the sole focus, given extensive reports documenting oral transmission of both viral and nonviral STDs. (4) (Human papillomavirus human papillomavirus (HPV), any of a family of more than 60 viruses that cause various growths, including plantar warts and genital warts, a sexually transmitted disease. Detectable warts can be or removed, usually by chemicals, freezing, or laser, but often recur. , herpes simplex virus Herpes simplex virus
A virus that can cause fever and blistering on the skin, mucous membranes, or genitalia.

Mentioned in: Conjunctivitis


herpes simplex virus
, hepatitis B Hepatitis B Definition

Hepatitis B is a potentially serious form of liver inflammation due to infection by the hepatitis B virus (HBV). It occurs in both rapidly developing (acute) and long-lasting (chronic) forms, and is one of the most common chronic
, gonorrhea, syphilis syphilis (sĭf`əlĭs), contagious sexually transmitted disease caused by the spirochete Treponema pallidum (described by Fritz Schaudinn and Erich Hoffmann in 1905). , chlamydia and chancroid chancroid: see sexually transmitted disease.  can be transmitted orally, although authoritative data on the probabilities of oral transmission are lacking.)

Furthermore, various studies have indicated that the prevalence of oral sex is increasing. For example, using accounts from 4,089 women attending genitourinary genitourinary /gen·i·to·uri·nary/ (jen?i-to-u´ri-nar-e) pertaining to the genital and urinary organs.

gen·i·to·u·ri·nar·y
adj. Abbr.
 medical clinics in London, Evans and colleagues found that the prevalence of fellatio A sexual act in which a male places his penis into the mouth of another person.

At Common Law, fellatio was considered a crime against nature. It was classified as a felony and punishable by imprisonment and/or death.
 increased from 70% to 82% between 1982 and 1992, while that of fellatio with ejaculation ejaculation /ejac·u·la·tion/ (e-jak?u-la´shun) forcible, sudden expulsion; especially expulsion of semen from the male urethra.  increased from 37% to 51%. (5) Findings from the two UK National Surveys of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (NATSAL NATSAL National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (UK) ) have shown that the practice of oral sex is common in both heterosexual and homosexual partnerships. (6) In the first NATSAL (conducted in 1990), 70% of men and 65% of women aged 16-44 reported oral-genital contact with a partner of the opposite sex during the previous 12 months; in the second NATSAL (carried out in 2000), the proportions were 78% and 77%, respectively. (7)

The practice of oral sex is also highly prevalent among young people, regardless of whether they have previously engaged in penetrative intercourse. For instance, more than half of 1,067 university students aged 17-25 surveyed in Australia reported ever having had oral sex, and 13% had engaged in oral sex but not in vaginal or anal penetration. (8) In the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , an analysis of the 1995 National Survey of Adolescent Males found that 55% of men aged 15-19 had ever engaged in vaginal intercourse, 49% had ever received oral sex and 39% had ever given oral sex. (9) A study examining precoital sexual activities among a sample of U.S. college students found that 70% of males and 58% of females had engaged in cunnilingus An act in which the female sexual organ is orally stimulated.

At Common Law, cunnilingus was not a crime. It is presently a crime in some jurisdictions and is usually treated as Sodomy.
 at least once before having penetrative sex; 57% of each gender had engaged in fellatio. (10) In a longitudinal study longitudinal study

a chronological study in epidemiology which attempts to establish a relationship between an antecedent cause and a subsequent effect. See also cohort study.
 of 580 U.S. ninth graders completing self-administered questionnaires, 20% reported having had oral sex, and 14% vaginal sex. In addition, participants viewed oral sex as significantly less risky in terms of health, social and emotional consequences than vaginal sex. (11)

Literature on the use of condoms and dental dams during fellatio and cunnilingus remains limited. One study, however, investigating the sexual practices of 952 high school "virgins" in the United States, found that 9% had experienced fellatio with ejaculation, and 10% had engaged in heterosexual cunnilingus. Of those who had engaged in fellatio with ejaculation, 86% had never used a condom and 8% had used condoms sporadically. (12) The researchers speculated that the proportion using dental dams during cunnilingus was even smaller. More recently, analyses from the third wave of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (also called Add Health) is the first and only nationally-representative study of adolescent sexuality, which has spawned over one thousand peer-reviewed publications on many issues related to adolescent health and  revealed that only 4% of young people who had ever had oral sex used a condom the first time. (13)

The 1990 NATSAL data show that 47% and 46% of young men and women aged 16-19, respectively, had ever engaged in cunnilingus; 47% and 44%, respectively, had engaged in fellatio. (14) However, little attention has been paid to the timing of oral sex among young people in the United Kingdom and the use of condoms and dental dams during oral-genital contact. In this article, we address this knowledge gap, using findings from a study of young people in education settings.

METHODS

The research, which was conducted between January 2003 and May 2005, consisted of two phases. In the first, full- or part-time students in four areas of the United Kingdom completed a quantitative self-administered questionnaire; in the second, a sample of young people that included a number of the survey respondents completed sexual event diaries. Three focus group discussions held with students from the University of Southampton In the most recent RAE assessment (2001), it has the only engineering faculty in the country to receive the highest rating (5*) across all disciplines.[3] According to The Times Higher Education Supplement  at the beginning of the project informed the design of the research tools, and young people in each of the study areas assisted with their development.

Both the survey questionnaire and the sexual event diary were approved by the University of Southampton School of Psychology Ethics Committee ethics committee A multidisciplinary hospital body composed of a broad spectrum of personnel–eg, physicians, nurses, social workers, priests, and others, which addresses the moral and ethical issues within the hospital. See DNR, Institutional review board. . Further, the head or lead personal, social and health education personal, social and health education n (BRIT) (SCOL) → formación social y sanitaria para la vida adulta

personal, social and health education person (Brit) n (Scol
 teacher of each participating institution approved the content of the questionnaire.

Survey Questionnaire

The survey areas were selected on the basis of local 15-19-year-old women's rates of pregnancy and first episodes of genital warts genital warts: see human papillomavirus. . To ensure that the sample contained a range of young people and sexual experiences, two areas with high rates of both and two areas with low rates of both were randomly selected.

The sampling frame was all educational institutions (vocational schools, academic schools and colleges) with students aged 16 and older in the four areas, defined by their local education authority boundaries. Because of the sensitive nature of the questionnaire, full random sampling of institutions was not possible; a few withdrew from the selection process during initial consultations. Cluster sampling Cluster sampling is a sampling technique used when "natural" groupings are evident in a statistical population. It is often used in marketing research. In this technique, the total population is divided into these groups (or clusters) and a sample of the groups is selected.  was used to select survey respondents; to reduce possible bias associated with sampling large numbers of young people from a small number of clusters, a minimum of five schools were sampled per area. A total of 21 institutions were recruited to the study.

Students submitted completed questionnaires to a teacher or a researcher in a sealed, unmarked envelope to ensure confidentiality Ali teachers received detailed instructions as to the procedure to follow, and no problems were reported in relation to possible variations between schools.

The questionnaire was based on that used by de Visser and colleagues in Australia to investigate condom use among young people, (15) complemented by tried and tested questions from an earlier study of young people's sexual behavior conducted by the Centre for Sexual Health Research. (16) It assessed multiple variables, including demographic factors; sexual orientation sexual orientation
n.
The direction of one's sexual interest toward members of the same, opposite, or both sexes, especially a direction seen to be dictated by physiologic rather than sociologic forces.
; knowledge and attitudes relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 sexual behavior and health; experiences of STDs and pregnancy; and experiences of oral, vaginal and anal sex Noun 1. anal sex - intercourse via the anus, committed by a man with a man or woman
anal intercourse, buggery, sodomy

sexual perversion, perversion - an aberrant sexual practice;
. Questions regarding experiences of oral sex were carefully worded in order to be applicable to all young people, regardless of their sexual orientation. Post codes were also collected, enabling allocation of respondents to an index of social deprivation for the small area in which they lived.

Of particular relevance to this article were questions relating to oral sex. Respondents were asked whether STDs can be transmitted through oral sex performed on a man and oral sex performed on a woman; possible responses were yes, no and don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
. Through the use of a five-point Likert scale Likert scale A subjective scoring system that allows a person being surveyed to quantify likes and preferences on a 5-point scale, with 1 being the least important, relevant, interesting, most ho-hum, or other, and 5 being most excellent, yeehah important, etc , respondents were asked how strongly they agreed that men expect to be given oral sex, women expect to be given oral sex and it is important to use condoms for fellatio. Furthermore, the questionnaire asked respondents which sexual activities they had ever engaged in, including fellatio and cunnilingus, and in what order and at what age they had first experienced each.

During the focus group discussions held at the beginning of the study, participants spoke freely about the use of condoms during fellatio, but very few had ever heard of dental dams, and none had used one for cunnilingus. Furthermore, on piloting, recommendations were made not to include questions about dental dams, as many young people were unaware of them. In response to these recommendations, and to ensure the acceptability of the questionnaire, particularly in regard to length, questioning about the use of protection during oral sex was limited to acts of fellatio. Respondents who indicated that they had experienced fellatio more than once were asked to rate the frequency with which they had used condoms during fellario, using a 10-point scale with responses ranging from never to always. Finally, all those who had ever used a condom for oral sex were asked their reasons for using one. Respondents were given a range of options from which to select, and a space was provided for write-in responses. Multiple answers were permitted.

Sexual Event Diary

All survey respondents were invited, by means of a detachable de·tach  
tr.v. de·tached, de·tach·ing, de·tach·es
1. To separate or unfasten; disconnect: detach a check from the checkbook; detach burs from one's coat.

2.
 form, to complete sexual event diaries. These diaries enable data on respondents' sexual behavior to be collected over time and reduce retrospective bias, as each diary is completed soon after a sexual event. In addition, because the sample unit is a sexual event, rather than an individual respondent, variance between events can be analyzed. Twenty-two percent of survey respondents (297) were interested in participating in this phase of the study; of these, 147 fulfilled the selection criterion of having engaged in at least one episode of oral or vaginal sex within the previous six months.

Potential participants received five sexual event diaries and postage-paid return envelopes. The diary consisted of a short questionnaire to be completed as soon as possible after a sexual event, defined as an encounter featuring oral, anal or vaginal sex. Once a participant had returned four diaries, a further five were mailed out; thus, each participant completed up to 10 diaries. The diary phase ran for six months; participants could leave the study at any time.

The diary collected detailed contextual information regarding each sexual event, including partner characteristics, use of alcohol and drugs, communication and discussion regarding contraceptive and condom use, desire to use protection, concerns regarding pregnancy and SID transmission, and use of protection, including masons for and against.

Sixty-one of the 147 young people recruited via the survey returned at least one completed event diary (for a 41% response rate). Because survey participants were from schools whose students were mainly 16-18 years old and we wished to include older, more experienced young people in the diary phase of the study, an additional targeting of 18-21-year-olds was undertaken via e-mail and poster advertising in university settings. Another 47 young people enrolled as a result of this process, bringing the final number of participants to 108. A total of 714 diaries were submitted, giving a total sample size of 714 sexual events.

Analysis

Statistical analyses of the questionnaire and diary data were performed using SPSS A statistical package from SPSS, Inc., Chicago (www.spss.com) that runs on PCs, most mainframes and minis and is used extensively in marketing research. It provides over 50 statistical processes, including regression analysis, correlation and analysis of variance.  version 12.0. Because young people's sexual development and experiences differ by gender, we analyzed men and women separately where possible; chi-square was used to test for significant differences. In this article, we focus predominantly on the findings from the survey questionnaire, supplemented by a limited number of findings from the sexual event diaries.

RESULTS

Characteristics of the Samples

Forty-four percent of the 1,373 questionnaires were returned by young men, and 56% by young women (Table 1). More than half of respondents (58%) were aged 16, and the vast majority (90%) were white. Nearly a quarter of respondents lived in census wards with a very low level of socioeconomic so·ci·o·ec·o·nom·ic  
adj.
Of or involving both social and economic factors.


socioeconomic
Adjective

of or involving economic and social factors

Adj. 1.
 deprivation (based on national levels), and two-fifths lived in areas of high or very high deprivation. The majority (95%) of respondents described themselves as heterosexual.

Twenty-four males and 84 females returned sexual event diaries. Fifty-nine percent of these respondents were aged 16-18, and 83% were white. Eighty-two percent of the 714 diary events featured vaginal intercourse, and 63% featured an occasion of oral sex (given, received or both).

Knowledge and Attitudes

Twenty-six percent of respondents did not know that STDs can be transmitted via oral sex; a greater proportion of men than of women did not know this (for fellatio, 30% vs. 20%, [chi square chi square (kī),
n a nonparametric statistic used with discrete data in the form of frequency count (nominal data) or percentages or proportions that can be reduced to frequencies.
] = 18.80, p<0.000; for cunnilingus, 30% vs. 21%, [chi square] = 14.39, p<0.000). By comparison, only 2% of young people were unaware that STDs can be transmitted via vaginal intercourse with ejaculation. Although older respondents appeared to be more knowledgeable than younger ones, age differences were significant only for females. For instance, 22% of 16-year-old women did not know that STDs can be transmitted to a man through oral sex, compared with 5% of 18-year-olds ([chi square]= 11.76, p<0.003); 23% and 5%, respectively, did not know about possible transmission to a woman ([chi square]= 12.60, p<0.002).

Overall, 43 % of young people agreed or strongly agreed that men expect to be given oral sex, whereas only 20% agreed that women have this expectation. Although there was no difference in opinions between men and women in regard to men's expectation of oral sex, a significantly greater proportion of men than of women agreed that women expect oral sex (25% vs. 16%, [chi square] = 22.61, p<0.000). Furthermore, the proportions agreeing with these statements were significantly higher among both men and women who reported having had oral, anal or vaginal sex than among their sexually inexperienced in·ex·pe·ri·ence  
n.
1. Lack of experience.

2. Lack of the knowledge gained from experience.



in
 counterparts (Table 2).

Fewer than a quarter of respondents (23%) agreed or strongly agreed that it is important to use condoms during fellatio. Once again, opinions differed between men and women: Some 29% of women agreed that it is important, compared with 14% of men ([chi square] = 74.04, p<0.000). Furthermore, a smaller proportion of sexually experienced women than of their sexually inexperienced peers responded positively (Table 2). All of these variations in opinion held across all ages.

Sexual Experience

* Types of experiences. Forty-two percent of men and 52 % of women reported having had penetrative vaginal intercourse at least once (Table 3); the proportion was 41% among 16-year-olds, 53% among 17-year-olds and 68% among those aged 18 and older (not shown). A significantly greater proportion of women than of men reported ever having performed oral sex (55% vs. 45%). Similar proportions of males and females reported ever having received oral sex (50% and 52%, respectively). Fifty-six percent of respondents had given or received oral sex. As expected, the proportion with such experience increased with age--from 49% among those aged 16 to 63% among those aged 17 and 73% among those 18 or older.

Seven percent of men and 9% of women reported ever having engaged in anal sex. Only one significant variation in young people's sexual experiences by social deprivation was found: Sixteen percent of men living in areas of very high social deprivation had engaged in anal sex, compared with 3% of young men in areas of very low social deprivation ([chi square] = 14.63, p<0.006).

* Timing of oral sex. Some 240 male and 384 female respondents had engaged in penetrative vaginal intercourse. Sixty-four percent of men and 62% of women had engaged in fellatio before first vaginal intercourse occurred. Slightly smaller proportions had experienced cunnilingus prior to first vaginal intercourse--49% and 55% of men and women, respectively. Overall, 70% of those who had had vaginal intercourse had done so with prior experience of oral sex.

Among the 334 male and 361 female respondents who had never engaged in penetrative vaginal intercourse, 22% and 18%, respectively, had experienced fellatio. Eighteen percent of men had performed cunnilingus, and 16% of women had received it. Overall, among those who had not yet engaged in penetrative intercourse, 22% had had oral sex (24% of males and 21% of females).

Condom Use During Fellatio

Of all young people who had reportedly given or received fellatio, 20% had ever used a condom; a small but significantly greater proportion of women than of men reported use (23% vs. 17%--Table 3). Among the 82 respondents who had experienced fellatio on only one occasion, 13% of males and 21% of females reported having used a condom. Of the 599 respondents who reported more than one occasion of fellatio, 83% of males and 78% of females reported never having used a condom; fewer than 2% of each reported always having used one.

The most common reasons men gave for using condoms during oral sex were to avoid STD (Subscriber Trunk Dialing) Long distance dialing outside of the U.S. that does not require operator intervention. STD prefix codes are required and billing is based on call units, which are a fixed amount of money in the currency of that country.  transmission and to be more hygienic hy·gien·ic
adj.
1. Of or relating to hygiene.

2. Tending to promote or preserve health.

3. Sanitary.
 (Figure 1). By contrast, women most commonly report using condoms because of the taste * or to avoid the dilemma of whether to spit or swallow ejaculate ejaculate /ejac·u·late/ (e-jak´u-lat) to expel suddenly, especially semen.
ejaculate /ejac·u·late/ (e-jak´u-lat 
.

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

Interestingly, condom use during fellatio did not differ between those who knew that fellatio poses a risk of STD transmission and those who did not. Eighty-two percent of those who had experienced fellatio, but never with a condom, reported that STDs can be transmitted during fellatio.

Reasons for not using a condom for fellatio were not explored in the survey questionnaire, but were covered in the sexual event diaries. Once again, condom use for fellatio was found to be very low. In 99% of the 75 diary events submitted by male participants that reported fellatio, no condom was used. Similarly, no condom was used for fellatio in 96% of the 258 relevant diary encounters submitted by females. The most common reasons men gave for not using a condom were that fellatio feels better without a condom and that they simply had not thought about using one; the most common reason women gave was not wanting to use a condom (Figure 2).

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

DISCUSSION

In the United Kingdom, the numbers of reported cases of gonorrhea and uncomplicated genital genital /gen·i·tal/ (jen´i-t'l)
1. pertaining to reproduction, or to the reproductive organs.

2. (in the plural) the reproductive organs.


gen·i·tal
adj.
1.
 chlamydia have risen steeply since the mid-1990s, particularly among young people. For instance, between 1995 and 2003, diagnoses of new episodes of gonorrhea and chlamydia increased by 197% and 409%, respectively, among men aged 16-19, and by 174% and 252% among women in the same age-group. (17) Nonetheless, our findings suggest that many young people in the United Kingdom remain ignorant of the ways in which STDs can be transmitted; a quarter of those surveyed were unaware that STDs can be transmitted via oral-genital contact. Further, even among those who were not ignorant of this, few appeared to take heed to be careful or cautious.

See also: Take
 of the risks involved.

Teenage pregnancy and STD prevention initiatives focused on advocating the use of condoms and other contraceptive methods Noun 1. contraceptive method - birth control by the use of devices (diaphragm or intrauterine device or condom) or drugs or surgery
contraception

birth control, birth prevention, family planning - limiting the number of children born
 during penetrative vaginal and anal sex appear to be having some impact, as more than 80% of young people nationally report condom use at first vaginal intercourse. (18) However, although the risk of STD transmission is far greater during vaginal and anal sex than during oral sex, the increasing practice of oral sex, the low rates of barrier method use and the finding that first oral sex often occurs prior to first vaginal or anal sex will likely help increase the relative importance of oral sex as a mode of transmission for genital pathogens. (19)

The results presented here are based on a relatively small sample of young people living in the United Kingdom, and the final sample is not truly representative of all those aged 16-21; for instance, only students were included, ([dagger]) and they were not randomly selected. Nevertheless, the results highlight young people's oral sex attitudes and practices, and raise several key issues that merit further consideration by practitioners, teachers, parents, and community and youth workers.

The practice of cunnilingus, although widespread, appears to be slightly less common than that of fellatio. Consistent with this finding, the proportion of respondents who felt that men expect oral sex was greater than the proportion who felt that women have this expectation, which may be evidence of strong and continuing cultural and social taboos imposed on women's sexual expression and fulfilment. (20) Although it appears that many young women have experienced reciprocal sexual gratification GRATIFICATION. A reward given voluntarily for some service or benefit rendered, without being requested so to do, either expressly or by implication.  with their partners, expectations of the majority remain low.

Not all STDs are curable cur·a·ble
adj.
Capable of being cured or healed.
, but all are preventable. (21) Current UK policy for safer-sex promotion is based on increasing choice, encouraging delay until both partners feel ready,, and improving the availability and use of protection. Obviously, the use of condoms and dental dams during oral sex is key if transmission risk is to be minimized. However, our findings highlight young people's lack of motivation to use condoms during fellatio, let alone to consider using dental dams for cunnilingus. Only 29% of women surveyed and 14% of men agreed that it is important to use condoms during fellatio, and levels of agreement were lower among sexually experienced young people than among those who had yet to experience oral, anal or vaginal sex.

Consequently, levels of condom use during fellatio were extremely low. Moreover, condom use during fellatio was no more common among those with correct knowledge of STD transmission routes than among those without such knowledge, indicating that a shift in behavior will require more than increasing knowledge. Reduced pleasure and lack of motivation, desire and forethought fore·thought  
n.
1. Deliberation, consideration, or planning beforehand.

2. Preparation or thought for the future. See Synonyms at prudence.
 were all reasons given for not using condoms during fellatio, whereas more practical reasons--to be hygienic, to avoid the dilemma of whether to spit out Verb 1. spit out - spit up in an explosive manner
splutter, sputter

cough out, cough up, expectorate, spit up, spit out - discharge (phlegm or sputum) from the lungs and out of the mouth

2.
 or swallow ejaculate, and to deal with the taste--were commonly cited as triggers for use.

The survey results do not shed further light on the debate as to whether young people use oral sex to avoid intercourse or whether they feel pressure to engage in oral sex. (22) Nevertheless, the findings suggest that oral sex is a highly prevalent behavior among UK young people and that it frequently begins at an early age--a fact that some health and education professionals may overlook but that has direct bearing on health promotion activities. Greater efforts are needed to publicize pub·li·cize  
tr.v. pub·li·cized, pub·li·ciz·ing, pub·li·ciz·es
To give publicity to.


publicize or -cise
Verb

[-cizing, -cized]
 the risk of exposure to STDs that many young people face because they engage in unprotected noncoital sexual activities before (and after) they enter into relationships involving coitus coitus /co·i·tus/ (ko´it-us) sexual connection per vaginam between male and female.co´ital

coitus incomple´tus , coitus interrup´tus
. Accordingly, the definitions of "sex," "sexual activity" and "risky sexual behaviors" need to be extended and clearly defined, in both health and education agendas, to prevent some risk behaviors from being overlooked. As research has shown, leaving young people to determine for themselves the definition of terms can lead to widespread confusion: In a survey of 527 U.S. college students, 55% of those who said they had kept their vow to abstain from abstain from
verb refrain from, avoid, decline, give up, stop, refuse, cease, do without, shun, renounce, eschew, leave off, keep from, forgo, withhold from, forbear, desist from, deny yourself, kick (
 sexual activity until marriage reported having engaged in oral sex. (23) While the considerably higher risks of vaginal (and anal) sex need to be stressed, it is vital to inform young people of the risks of other sexual behaviors, and not to limit the issue of safer sex to safer vaginal sex.

One reason that the risks associated with oral sexual activities among young people have received little attention may be the priority given in school-based sex education classes to sex for reproduction. Alien has pointed to the gap between knowledge as received during sex education in New Zealand Education in New Zealand is nominally free for all primary, intermediate and secondary schooling. However, most schools also ask for a "voluntary donation" from parents, informally known as "school fees" or as "parental contribution".  schools and the practices young people engage in. She argues that young people perceive knowledge from secondary sources as "comprising two discourses; an official discourse of knowledge and a discourse of erotics." (24) Since oral sex can be regarded as falling more within the erotic zone than the knowledge zone (that is, sex as reproduction), it is likely to be relatively ignored in school settings. Hirst raises a similar issue, concerning UK young people's views of the mismatch mismatch

1. in blood transfusions and transplantation immunology, an incompatibility between potential donor and recipient.

2. one or more nucleotides in one of the double strands in a nucleic acid molecule without complementary nucleotides in the same position on the other
 between their school-based sex education and their actual experiences; foreplay foreplay /fore·play/ (for´pla) the sexually stimulating play preceding intercourse.

fore·play
n.
The sexual stimulation that precedes intercourse.
 and "heavy petting" were reported as being more or less ignored in classroom coverage of sex and relationships. (25) Fine and Tolman are among those who have pointed to the lack of discussions of desire in formal sex education classes, (26) and Ingham has written about the relative silence surrounding the concept of pleasure, both in schools and in the home. (27)

Given the prevalence of oral sex and the lack of knowledge about its risks among young people, it is essential that those charged with teaching youth about sexual issues--whether in schools, in clinics or in homes--be encouraged to broaden the scope of their coverage.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Brook (a national voluntary-sector provider of sexual health advice and services for young people), for which this study was conducted, and the Big Lottery Fund The Big Lottery Fund (BIG) is a grant-making organisation in the UK (England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland) created by the Government to administer the funding of good causes following the creation of the National Lottery.  for funding the study.

* Taste does not discriminate between the avoidance of the taste of the penis and associated fluids and the use of flavored condoms.

([dagger]) Attempts were made, however, to select educational institutions with students representing a range of abilities, including those attending vocational and government training programs.

REFERENCES

(1.) Social Exclusion Unit, Teenage Pregnancy, London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1999; and Teenage Pregnancy Strategy Evaluation Team, Teenage Pregnancy Strategy Evaluation: Final Report Synthesis, London: UK Department for Education and Skills The Department for Education and Skills (DfES) was a United Kingdom government department between 2001 and 2007. It was responsible for the education system and children's services in England. On 28 June 2007 the department was split in two by Gordon Brown. , 2005.

(2.) HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections Department, Diagnoses of Selected STIs, by Region, Age and Sex Seen at GUM Clinics, London: Health Protection Agency, 2004.

(3.) UK Department of Health, The National Strategy for Sexual Health and HIV: Better Prevention, Better Services, Better Sexual Health, London: UK Department of Health, 2001.

(4.) Edwards S and Carne C, Oral sex and transmission of viral STIs, Sexually Transmitted Infections, 1998, 74(1):6-10; Edwards S and Came C, Oral sex and transmission of nonviral STIs, Sexually Transmitted Infections, 1998, 74(2):95-100; and Cherpes TL, Meyn LA and Hillier Hillier is a surname, and may refer to:
  • Bevis Hillier English art historian, author and journalist
  • David Hillier English former footballer.
  • Erwin Hillier German-born cinematographer known for his work in British cinema
 SL, Cunnilingus and vaginal intercourse are risk factors for herpes simplex virus type 1 acquisition in women, Sexually Transmitted Diseases Sexually transmitted diseases

Infections that are acquired and transmitted by sexual contact. Although virtually any infection may be transmitted during intimate contact, the term sexually transmitted disease is restricted to conditions that are largely
, 2005, 32(2):84-89.

(5.) Evans BA et al., Trends in female sexual behaviour and sexually transmitted diseases in London, 1982-1992, Genitourinary Medicine Genitourinary medicine is a portmanteau that includes aspects of andrology, gynecology and urology. It is sometimes used as a euphemism for medicine dealing with sexually transmitted diseases. , 1995, 71(5):286-290.

(6.) Johnson AM et al., Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles, Oxford: Blackwell Scientific, 1994; and Johnson AM et al., Sexual behaviour in Britain: partnerships, practices, and HIV risk behaviours, Lancet lancet /lan·cet/ (lan´set) a small, pointed, two-edged surgical knife.

lan·cet
n.
, 2001, 358(9296): 1835-1842.

(7.) Special tabulations of data from the 1990 National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles The National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (NATSAL) is the name given to two face-to-face interviews of people in the United Kingdom regarding their sexual behaviour and patterns. The two rounds of interviews are NATSAL I (1990-91) and NATSAL II (2000-01). ; and Johnson AM et al., 2001, op. cit. (see reference 6).

(8.) Kippax S Kippax may refer to:
  • Kippax, West Yorkshire, a village which gave its name to …
  • Alan Kippax, Australian cricket player, who gave his name to …
  • Kippax Centre, Australian Capital Territory, a suburban centre in Canberra, Australia, that also has …
, HIV education and prevention--what's happening and what works: changes in sexual behaviour, paper presented at the fourth annual NSW NSW New South Wales

Noun 1. NSW - the agency that provides units to conduct unconventional and counter-guerilla warfare
Naval Special Warfare
 HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome  Education and Prevention Conference, Sydney, Australia, June 10-13, 1992.

(9.) Gates GJ and Sonenstein FL, Heterosexual genital sexual activity among adolescent males: 1988 and 1995, Family Planning family planning

Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources.
 Perspectives, 2000, 32(6):295-297 & 304.

(10.) Schwartz IM, Sexual activity prior to coital co·i·tus  
n.
Sexual union between a male and a female involving insertion of the penis into the vagina.



[Latin, from past participle of co
 initiation: a comparison between males and females, Archives of Sexual Behavior Archives of Sexual Behavior is an academic sexology journal and the official publication of the International Academy of Sex Research.

Contributions consist of empirical research (both quantitative and qualitative), theoretical reviews and essays, clinical case
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(11.) Halpern-Felsher BL et al., Oral versus vaginal sex among adolescents: perceptions, attitudes and behavior, Pediatrics, 2005, 115(4): 845-851.

(12.) Schuster MA, Bell RM and Kanouse DE, The sexual practices of adolescent virgins: genital sexual activities of high school students who have never had vaginal intercourse, American Journal of Public Health The American Journal of Public Health (AJPH) is a peer reviewed monthly journal of the American Public Health Association (APHA). The Journal also regularly publishes authoritative editorials and commentaries and serves as a forum for the analysis of health policy. , 1996, 86(11):1570-1576.

(13.) Bruckner H and Bearman E After the promise: the STD consequences of adolescent virginity pledges Virginity pledges (or abstinence pledges) are commitments made by teenagers and young adults to refrain from sexual intercourse until marriage. They are most common in the United States, especially among Evangelical Christian denominations. , Journal of Adolescent Health, 2005, 36(4):271-278.

(14.) Special tabulations of data from the 1990 National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles.

(15.) de Visser RO and Smith AM, When always isn't enough: implications of the late application of condoms for the validity and reliability of self reported condom use, AIDS Care, 2000, 12(2):221-224.

(16.) Stone N and Ingham R, Factors affecting British teenagers' contraceptive use at first intercourse: the importance of partner communication, Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health Within the framework of WHO's definition of health[1] as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, reproductive health, or sexual health/hygiene , 2002, 34(4):191-197.

(17.) HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections Department, 2004, op. cit. (see reference 2).

(18.) Wellings K et al., Sexual behaviour in Britain: early heterosexual experience, Lancet, 2001, 358(9296): 1843-1845.

(19.) Edwards S and Came C, Oral sex and transmission of viral STIs, 1998, op. cir. (see reference 4); Edwards S and Came C, Oral sex and transmission of nonviral STIs, 1998, op. cir. (see reference 4); and Cherpes TL, Meyn LA and Hillier SL, 2005, op. cit. (see reference 4).

(20.) Ingham R, "We didn't cover that at school": education against pleasure or education for pleasure? Sex Education, 2005, 5(4):375-388.

(21.) Donovan B, The repertoire of human efforts to avoid sexually transmissible transmissible /trans·mis·si·ble/ (trans-mis´i-b'l) capable of being transmitted.

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Capable of being conveyed from one person to another.
 diseases: past and present. Part 1: strategies used before or instead of sex, Sexually Transmitted Infections, 2000, 76(1): 7-12; and Donovan B, The repertoire of human efforts to avoid sexually transmissible diseases: past and present. Part 2: strategies used during or after sex, Sexually Transmitted Infections, 2000, 76(2): 88-93.

(22.) Remez L, Oral sex among adolescents: is it sex or is it abstinence abstinence: see fasting; temperance movements. ? Family Planning Perspectives, 2000, 32(6):298-304.

(23.) Lipsitz A, Bishop P and Robinson C, Virginity pledges: who takes them and how well do they work? paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association The American Psychological Association (APA) is a professional organization representing psychology in the US. Description and history
The association has around 150,000 members and an annual budget of around $70m.
, Toronto, Aug. 7-10, 2003.

(24.) Allen L, Closing sex education's knowledge/practice gap: the reconceptualisation of young people's sexual knowledge, Sex Education, 2001, 1(2):109-122.

(25.) Hirst J, Researching young people's sexuality and learning about sex: experience, need, and sex and relationship education, Culture, Health and Sexuality, 2004, 6(2): 115-129.

(26.) Fine M, Sexuality, schooling and adolescent females: the missing discourse of desire, Harvard Educational Review The Harvard Educational Review is an interdisciplinary scholarly journal of opinion and research dealing with education, published by the Harvard Education Publishing Group. The journal was founded in 1930 with circulation to policymakers, researchers, administrators, and teachers. , 1988, 58(1):29-53; and Tolman D, Doing desire: adolescent girls' struggles for/with sexuality, Gender and Society, 1994, 8(3):324-342.

(27.) Ingham R, 2005, op. cit. (see reference 20).

Nicole Stone is research fellow, Bethan Hatherall is researcher and Roger Ingham is director, all at the Centre for Sexual Health Research, University of Southampton, UK. Juliet McEachran is policy advisor, JSI/Europe, London.

Author contact: ri@soton.ac.uk
TABLE 1. Percentage distribution of students participating
in a survey on sexual experience and knowledge, by
selected characteristics, United Kingdom, 2004

Characteristic                   %

Gender                           (N=1,368)
Male                                  44.1
Female                                55.9

Age                              (N=1,335)
16                                    58.0
17                                    31.5
18                                     7.9
19-21                                  2.6

Race/ethnicity                   (N=1,362)
White                                 89.5
Black                                  6.8
Asian                                  2.4
Other                                  1.4

Social deprivation level         (N=1,029)
Very low                              23.4
Low                                   15.5
Medium                                18.6
High                                  19.8
Very high                             22.6

Sexual orientation               (N=1,344)
Heterosexual                          94.5
Homosexual                             2.5
Bisexual                               1.0
Unsure                                 1.9

Total                                100.0

TABLE 2. Percentage of respondents agreeing to selected
statements regarding oral sex, by gender and sexual
experience

Statement        Sexually         Sexually        [chi square]
                 inexperienced    experienced

Men expect to be given oral sex
Male             34.0             48.9            14.75 ***
Female           38.0             46.6             8.48 **

Women expect to be given oral sex
Male             17.0             29.7            12.42 **
Female            9.5             19.6            18.25 **

It is important to use condoms for fellatio

Male             15.8             13.2            17.09 ***
Female           37.3             24.7            35.41 ***

N
Male             243              360
Female           276              489

** p<.01. *** p<.001. Note: Sexual experience refers to oral, anal
or vaginal sex.

TABLE 3. Percentage distribution of respondents, by
selected sexual behavior measures, according to gender

Measure                                          Male       Female

Ever had vaginal sex                           (N=574)      (N=745)
Yes                                               41.8         51.5
No                                                58.2         48.5
[chi square] = 12.31 ***

Ever performed oral sex                        (N=560)      (N=730)
Yes                                               44.6         54.9
No                                                55.4         45.1
[chi square] = 13.42 ***

Ever received oral sex                         (N=570)      (N=721)
Yes                                               50.4         51.9
No                                                49.6         48.1

Ever received or performed
oral sex                                       (N=565)      (N=728)
Yes                                               54.0         58.4
No                                                46.0         41.6

Ever had anal sex                              (N=555)      (N=721)
Yes                                                7.4          9.3
No                                                92.6         90.7

Ever used a condom for fellatio ([dagger])     (N=285)      (N=402)
Yes                                               16.6         22.6
No                                                83.4         77.4
[chi square] = 4.23 *

Used a condom at only
experience of fellatio ([dagger])               (N=39)       (N=43)
Yes                                               12.8         20.9
No                                                87.2         79.1

Frequency of condom use over
multiple acts of fellatio ([dagger])           (N=244)      (N=355)
Never                                             82.8         77.5
<halfofthetime                                     8.6         15.2
Most of the time                                   7.0          5.9
Always                                             1.6          1.4

Total                                           100.00        100.0

* p<.05. *** p<.001. ([dagger]) Percentages are based
on those who have engaged in fellatio.
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Author:McEachran, Juliet
Publication:Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Mar 1, 2006
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