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Age at first intercourse, number of partners and sexually transmitted infection prevalence among Danish, Norwegian and Swedish women: estimates and trends from nationally representative cross‐sectional surveys of more than 100 000 women
Author(s) -
Hansen Bo T.,
Kjær Susanne K.,
ArnheimDahlström Lisen,
Liaw KaiLi,
Juul Kirsten E.,
Thomsen Louise T.,
Frederiksen Kirsten,
Elfström K. Miriam,
Munk Christian,
Nygård Mari
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acta obstetricia et gynecologica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.401
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1600-0412
pISSN - 0001-6349
DOI - 10.1111/aogs.13732
Subject(s) - medicine , demography , interquartile range , confidence interval , norwegian , odds ratio , cross sectional study , danish , population , sexual intercourse , public health , environmental health , surgery , linguistics , philosophy , nursing , pathology , sociology
Sexual behavior at the population level impacts on public health. Recent representative sexual behavior data are lacking. Material and methods Cross‐sectional surveys in 2005 and 2012 on women age 18‐45 years randomly selected from the general population in Denmark (n = 40 804), Norway (n = 30 331) and Sweden (n = 32 114). Results Median (interquartile range) age at first intercourse was 16 (15‐18) years in Denmark, 17 (16‐18) years in Norway, and 17 (15‐18) years in Sweden. Women in the most recent birth cohort had sexual debut at the lowest age, and were most likely to have sexual debut before the legal age of consent. Proportions with debut age ≤14 years among women born 1989‐1994 vs 1971‐1976, odds ratio (95% confidence interval) were: 18.4% vs 10.9%, 1.95 (1.74‐2.18) in Denmark, 12.9% vs 6.3%, 2.38 (2.01‐2.82) in Norway, 17.8% vs 11.4%, 1.75 (1.55‐1.98) in Sweden. Median (interquartile range) number of lifetime sexual partners was 6 (3‐10) in Denmark, 5 (2‐10) in Norway, and 6 (3‐11) in Sweden. The proportion of women reporting >10 sexual partners was also highest in the most recent survey. The percentage with odds ratio (95% confidence interval) in 2012 vs 2005 surveys were: 24.9% vs 22.8%, 1.13 (1.07‐1.18) for Denmark; 23.8% vs 19.8%, 1.27 (1.19‐1.34) for Norway; and 28.3% vs 23.8%, 1.31 (1.24‐1.38) for Sweden. Similarly, the proportion of women reporting ever having had a sexually transmitted infection among women age <30 years were: 29.4% vs 26.4%, 1.21 (1.13‐1.31) in Denmark, 28.9% vs 25.0%, 1.20 (1.10‐1.31) in Norway, and 29.4% vs 22.2%, 1.45 (1.33‐1.58) in Sweden. Conclusions Scandinavian women reported lower age at first intercourse in younger birth cohorts. Moreover, they reported more lifetime sexual partners and a higher prevalence of ever having a sexually transmitted infection in 2012 than in 2005. Our findings may inform the interpretation of trends in outcomes associated with sexual health, and public health policies.

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