After beverage administration, community women (n = 408) projected themselves into a scenario depicting a male partner exerting high or low pressure for unprotected sex. Mood, anticipated negative reactions from the partner, and condom-decision abdication were assessed. In both control and alcohol models, high pressure increased anticipated negative partner reaction, and positive mood was associated with increased abdication. In the alcohol model, victimization predicted abdication via anticipated negative partner reaction, and pressure decreased positive mood and abdication. In the control model, under high pressure, victimization history severity was positively associated with abdication.
Findings implicate condom-decision abdication as an important construct in understanding how women's sexual victimization histories may exert sustained impact on sexual interactions.
Via: http://ht.ly/RX9aS
By: George WH1, Davis KC, Masters NT, Kajumulo KF, Stappenbeck CA, Norris J, Heiman JR, Staples JM.
- 1Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Box 351525, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA, bgeorge@uw.edu.
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