Researchers conducted this study to evaluate demographic and behavioral characteristics of sexually active women compared to those who had abstained from intercourse in the past 6 months.
The study participants were women of childbearing age from six sites in three states in the USA. Survey questions were asked of women who were not surgically sterile and who had not gone through menopause. The main outcome measures were correlates of sexual abstinence.
Of the 1801 respondents, 244 reported abstaining from intercourse in the past 6 months. Univariate analysis revealed that abstinent women were less likely than sexually active women to have used illicit drugs, to have been physically abused, to be current smokers, to drink above risk thresholds, to have high Mental Health Inventory-5 scores, and to have health insurance. Abstinent women were more likely to be aged over 30 years and to have a high school education. Logistic regression showed that age >30 years, absence of illicit drug use, absence of physical abuse, and lack of health insurance were independently associated with sexual abstinence.
Prolonged sexual abstinence was not uncommon among adult women. Periodic, voluntary sexual abstinence was associated with positive health behaviors, implying that abstinence was not a random event. Future studies should address whether abstinence has a causal role in promoting healthy behaviors or whether women with a healthy lifestyle are more likely to choose abstinence.
Reference: https://srh.bmj.com/content/32/1/23