Young Women Underestimate STD Risk
Heavy drinking increases women's risk of sexually
transmitted disease
(Aug. 1, 2003) - Many young women are having
unprotected sex -- yet they
don't realize how risky it is.
In fact, these young women underestimate their risk for contracting a
sexually transmitted disease (STD), a new study shows. Binge drinking makes
it more likely they will have sex -- minus a condom -- the study adds.
STDs are a significant health problem for young women -- nationally,
among women ages 15 - 24, rates of human papillomavirus (HPV),
genital
herpes, and chlamydia are particularly high, writes researcher Kimberly S.
H. Yarnall, MD, with Duke University Medical Center.
STDs can substantially increase risk of infertility, pelvic inflammatory
disease, stillbirths, and chronic pain, Yarnall points out. Also, HPV may be
a cause of cervical cancer.
"Even though they are having unprotected sex, most young women would say
they are at low-risk of contracting an STD," she says in a news release.
"Some don't see STDs as a big deal and are desensitized to the risk."
Risky Business
Yarnell's study included 1,210 women -- all sexually active, unmarried,
heterosexual women between the ages of 18 and 25; some were students, some
were not. During phone interviews, the women were asked about all sorts of
risk behaviors, like binge drinking, history of vaginal sex and STDs,
how
they perceived risk of contracting an STD, and
condom use.
Here are some of the findings:
- More than 75% of all the women felt they were at low risk of
acquiring an STD.
- Binge drinking was strongly linked with having unprotected sex --
but only among non-students.
- The non-students were older, had more sex partners over the past
year, and were more likely to have had STDs.
- Both the students and non-students reported the same rates of
unprotected sex in the past three months.
- In both groups, women were less likely to use condoms if they were
older, white, on birth control pills or had partners who didn't see
condoms as important.
College students were steering away from binge drinking, likely because
of special campus programs addressing the issue, Yarnall says.
Non-students in general were more likely to have unprotected sex with
someone they did not consider to be a committed partner, she adds.
"Neither group had a great track record as far as safer sex," Yarnall
says. "But the college students did a little better overall. Students were
less likely to have unprotected sex with someone they met at a party or bar.
Non-students were just as likely to have unprotected sex with their
boyfriend as they were a man they had just met."
Doctors can help the situation by identifying and counseling young women
who may not see themselves at risk for sexually transmitted diseases, she
says.
Next: How do you talk to your sexual partner
about STDs?
Last updated: 8/03. Last reviewed: 10/05
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