Familial Aggregation of Sexual Risky Behaviors in the Northwestern Iran: A Cross Sectional Study

Davtalab Esmaeili, Elham, Ranandeh Kalankesh, Leila, Zeinalzadeh, Ali Hossein, Ghaffari, Alireza and Dastgiri, Saeed Familial Aggregation of Sexual Risky Behaviors in the Northwestern Iran: A Cross Sectional Study. Depiction of Health, 2025, vol. 16, n. 1, pp. 68-78. [Journal article (Paginated)]

[thumbnail of doh-16-68.pdf]
Preview
Text
doh-16-68.pdf

Download (976kB) | Preview

English abstract

Background. Much evidence indicates that familial aggregation plays an important role in determining and developing the control and prevention methods of diseases and high-risk behaviors. The present study aimed to estimate the prevalence of high-risk sexual behaviors and assess their familial aggregation among mother-offspring, father-offspring, between spouses, and among children. Methods. The current cross-sectional study involved 822 participants in Tabriz in 2022. The heads of households were regarded as probands and were selected using the convenience sampling method from the list of daily clients of the family medicine clinic at Asadabadi Hospital. Data was collected using two standard questionnaires: the behavioral risk factor tool and socioeconomic status, which were completed by the self-report method. The generalized estimating equations type 2 (GEE2) was employed to assess family aggregation. The significance level in all statistical tests was considered 0.05. Data was analyzed using STATA version 17 software. Results. The response rate was 95.47%. The prevalence of high-risk sexual behavior among the participants was reported to be 18.61%. There was statistically significant familial aggregation in risky sexual behavior between fathers and offspring (OR = 2.34, 95% CI: (1.4-4.45)). Furthermore, significant familial aggregation was found between mothers and offspring (OR = 1.88, 95% CI: (1.3-3.9)). Conclusion. The current study revealed a notable familial aggregation in risky sexual behavior, particularly between fathers and their offspring. Moreover, family members uniquely influence each other's participation in risky sexual behavior, irrespective of environmental or genetic factors.

Item type: Journal article (Paginated)
Keywords: Genetic Research, Health Risk Behaviors, Sexual Behaviors, Genetic Epidemiology
Subjects: F. Management.
Depositing user: Dr Vahideh Zare
Date deposited: 03 Aug 2025 15:48
Last modified: 03 Aug 2025 15:48
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10760/47022

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item