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The Journal of Sex Research (JSR) is a scholarly journal devoted to the publication of articles relevant to the variety of disciplines involved in the scientific study of sexuality. JSR is designed to stimulate research and promote an interdisciplinary understanding.
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Prevalence, Frequency, and Associations of Masturbation With Partnered Sexual Behaviors Among US Adolescents
Author Affiliations: Section of Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis (Drs Robbins and Fortenberry); Center for Sexual Health Promotion (Drs Schick, Reece, Herbenick, Sanders, Dodge, and Fortenberry), the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction (Dr Sanders), and Department of Gender Studies (Dr Sanders), Indiana University, Bloomington.
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2011;165(12):1087-1093. doi:10.1001/archpediatrics.2011.142
Objective To assess masturbation prevalence, frequency, and associations with partnered sexual behaviors.
Setting The United States of America.
Participants Nationally representative samples of adolescents aged 14 to 17 years.
Main Outcome Measures Solo masturbation, partnered sexual behaviors, and condom use.
Results Across age groups, more males (73.8%) reported masturbation than females (48.1%). Among males, masturbation occurrence increased with age: at age 14 years, 62.6% of males reported at least 1 prior occurrence, whereas 80% of 17-year-old males reported ever having masturbated. Recent masturbation also increased with age in males: 67.6% of 17-year-olds reported masturbation in the past month, compared with 42.9% of 14-year-olds. In females, prior masturbation increased with age (58% at age 17 years compared with 43.3% at age 14 years), but recent masturbation did not. Masturbation was associated with numerous partnered sexual behaviors in both males and females. In males, masturbation was associated with condom use, but in females it was not.
Conclusions Sexual development is a dynamic process during adolescence, and masturbation is an enduring component of sexuality. Fundamental differences appear to exist between male and female sexual expression. Health care providers should recognize that many teens masturbate and discuss masturbation with patients because masturbation is integral to normal sexual development.
Masturbation carries no risk of pregnancy or sexually transmitted infections and may have benefits to sexual and emotional health.1,2 While one major study of male and female college students found no association, positive or negative, between a history of masturbation during early adolescence and sexual satisfaction during young adulthood,3 other studies have shown positive relationships. Among women, masturbation in childhood and adolescence has been associated with positive sexual experiences later in life4 and a healthy self-image.5 In another study of adolescent females aged 16 to 18, those with negative or indifferent views about masturbation reported negative first sexual experiences compared with those who held positive views of masturbation.6
Masturbation is thought to be a common behavior. In studies of older adolescents and adults, masturbation is nearly universal among males and reported by a majority of females.7-11 In an Australian study, 58% of males and 42% of females aged 15 to 18 years reported at least 1 lifetime episode of masturbation.2 Masturbation onset was found to occur by age 13 years in 53% of males and 25% of females in another retrospective study.12 Also, in a recent national sample of sexual behaviors in the United States (from which data for the current study were obtained), masturbation was more common than any partnered sexual behavior among 14- to 17-year-old adolescents.13
Despite its apparent widespread prevalence, masturbation is a highly stigmatized topic viewed negatively across settings. In research on sexual behavior, masturbation is among the most sensitive topics, and underreporting by adolescents has been found even with the use of confidential reporting techniques.14 Although not universal in all denominations or branches of the world's major religions, guilt, shame, and indulgence continue to be themes all religions associate with masturbation.15,16 The public often views masturbation negatively as well. In the popular media, masturbation is often the subject of jokes.17,18 In 1994, when US Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders recommended including masturbation as a topic in public sexual education, she was heavily criticized and ultimately resigned.19 The Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS) guidelines on sexuality education include masturbation as a key topic,20 but masturbation is often omitted from sexuality education21 even in the context of abstinence-only education.22 Parents report having difficulty discussing masturbation with their adolescent children, some with the hope that their children will view masturbation unfavorably.23-25 Notably, health care providers also omit discussion of masturbation: in a study where 64% of parents with children aged 12 years or older recalled discussions with their health care provider on sexuality, only 6% of discussions addressed masturbation.26
Improved understanding of masturbation is critical to a comprehensive understanding of healthy adolescent sexual development. In the current study, masturbation frequency and the association between masturbation and other sexual health behaviors and condom use were assessed in a representative sample of American adolescents. Such understanding informs clinical approaches for addressing concerns about masturbation and demonstrates potentially important linkages between masturbation and other sexual health behaviors.
Data were obtained from The National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior (NSSHB), a population-based cross-sectional survey, to assess solo and partnered sexual behaviors conducted from March 2009 through May 2009 among adult and adolescent participants recruited via Knowledge Networks research panels (Menlo Park, California).13 Knowledge Networks panels were established based on random-digit dialing methods and address-based sampling. Randomly selected addresses were recruited to research panels through mailings with telephone follow-ups to nonresponders when possible. Once the panels were established, adults within a panel received a recruitment message from Knowledge Networks providing a description of the NSSHB and an invitation to participate. Individuals who agreed to participate were provided with computer hardware and access to the Internet, if needed. All questionnaire data were collected by Knowledge Networks via the Internet. Data obtained via Knowledge Networks have been used in other health-related studies, substantiating the validity of such methods for obtaining data from nationally representative samples of the US population.27
Recruitment included adolescent participants as well as their parents or guardians. A total of 2172 parents and guardians reviewed a description of the study (including the questionnaire): 62% consented to allow their child to be invited via e-mail to participate (n = 1347), 61% of invited adolescents responded (n = 831), and 99% of responding adolescents consented to participate (n = 820) (37% overall participation rate). All study protocols were approved by the institutional review board of Indiana University.
Data regarding gender, age, race/ethnicity, region of residence, education level, and family income were obtained from Knowledge Networks' participant files. The sample was stratified to the December 2008 Current Population Survey US census update.28 Poststratification data weights were used to make population-based estimates within gender, age, and race/ethnicity classifications.
Prevalence and frequency of masturbation was assessed in the context of inquiry about a variety of other sexual behaviors. Specifically, participants were presented with a list of sexual behaviors and asked “Have you done any of the following?” The subsequent cue relevant to masturbation read “I masturbated alone (stimulated your body for sexual pleasure, whether or not you had an orgasm).” This item addressed specific time periods: past 3 months, past year, and lifetime. Participants reporting masturbation either in the past 3 months or past year were subsequently asked “On average, during the past 12 months, about how often did you masturbate alone?” Response options included “a few times per year,” “a few times per month,” “2-3 times per week,” or “4 or more times per week.”
Specific sexual behaviors requiring a partner were assessed over the past year. Male and female participants were asked “Have you done any of the following?” and presented with the following sexual behaviors: “A female gave me oral sex (gave me head)”; “A male gave me oral sex (gave me head)”; “I gave oral sex to a female (I gave head)”; “I gave oral sex to a male (I gave head)”; “I masturbated with another person”; “Someone put their penis in my anus (butt)”; and “I had vaginal intercourse (penis in vagina).” Male participants were also asked about the following: “I put my penis in someone's anus (butt).”
In addition, participants were also asked if the indicated partnered sexual behaviors occurred during their most recent sexual experience (answering yes/no for each behavior). If participants answered that they had penile-vaginal intercourse or insertive or receptive anal sex during their most recent sexual experience, they were then asked “Which of the following about the use of a condom during this act of intercourse applies?” Condom use was recorded if the participant answered yes to the following statement: “we used a condom at some point during this sexual act.”
Separate analyses were conducted for adolescent men and women. All analyses were conducted using SPSS version 17.0 (SPSS Inc, Chicago, Illinois). Poststratification data weights were used during all analyses to maximize the generalizability of the sample characteristics to the population. Poststratification adjustments were based on current census data on national distributions for age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, and location within the United States. Descriptive statistics were used to calculate the proportion of adolescents reporting masturbation at any given time period and the distribution of responses by demographic variables, partnered sexual behaviors, and condom use. Approximate 95% confidence intervals were calculated using the adjusted Wald method.
Among the study sample, 50.5% were males (n = 414), 49.5% were females (n = 406), and race/ethnicity, education, family income, and geographic residence distribution reflected the US adolescent population (Table 1). Sexual orientation was self-identified as heterosexual for most participants (93.3%). Approximately half of all participants identified themselves as currently being in a romantic relationship (46.7% of males and 45.6% of females).
Table 1. Weighed Participant Characteristics for Total Adolescent Sample and by Gendera
Table 1. Weighed Participant Characteristics for Total Adolescent Sample and by Gendera
Masturbation differences by age and gender
Masturbation prevalence, both lifetime and in the past 90 days, was higher in males than females in all age groups (Table 2). Among males, at age 14 years, 62.6% reported ever having masturbated, while 72.7% of 15-year-olds, 78.1% of 16-year-olds, and 80% of 17-year-olds reported ever having masturbated. Among females, 43.3% of 14-year-olds reported a past experience of masturbation; this percentage did not change much until age 17 years, when it was found that 58% had ever masturbated. Although similar numbers of males and females reported masturbation in the past 90 days at age 14 years (42.9% of males and 36.7% of females), the percentage of males who indicated recent masturbation was higher in every subsequent age group, while recent masturbation showed little variation among age groups in females.
Table 2. Masturbation History Stratified by Age and Gender Using Poststratification Weights
Table 2. Masturbation History Stratified by Age and Gender Using Poststratification Weights
Masturbation frequency was also higher among males than females, but no trends by age were apparent for either gender (Table 3). When asked about masturbation frequency in the past year, approximately half of male participants reported masturbation at least twice weekly (49.1%). Among females, 45.5% reported masturbation a few times per year, while only 22.5% reported masturbation frequencies of at least 2 times a week.
Table 3. Frequency of Masturbation, Stratified by Age and Gender using Post-Stratification Weightsa
Table 3. Frequency of Masturbation, Stratified by Age and Gender using Post-Stratification Weightsa
Masturbation and partnered sexual behaviors
Solo masturbation in the past year was associated with partnered sexual behavior among both males and females (Table 4). Males reporting masturbation in the past year were more likely to have engaged in partnered sexual activity (odds ratio [OR], 4.2), and significant associations existed with penile-vaginal intercourse (OR, 4.3), giving oral sex (OR, 4.1), and receiving oral sex (OR, 3.
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