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Journal Article

Citation

Sklenarova H, Schulz A, Schuhmann P, Osterheider M, Neutze J. Child Abuse Negl. 2017; 76: 225-236.

Affiliation

University of Regensburg, Department for Forensic Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Universitätsstrasse 84, 930 53 Regensburg, Germany. Electronic address: janina.neutze@medbo.de.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.chiabu.2017.11.005

PMID

29149683

Abstract

Prevalence of Internet use among adolescents is high, but little is known about the online sexual activities of German adolescents. This study aimed to describe the 12-month prevalence of German adolescents' online sexual experiences with a focus on Online Sexual Solicitation (OSS, subjectively negative online sexual experiences with a peer or any sexual online experience, positive or negative, with an adult). A sample of male and female adolescents aged 14-17 (N=2238) was recruited using online survey panel. The sample was representative for gender and education. Subjects completed an online survey reporting their online sexual activities (i.e., sexual conversation, exchanging pictures, and cybersex) with peers (14-17y.) and/or adults (≥18y.).

FINDINGS illustrated that 51.3% (n=1148) of adolescents had experienced online sexual activity, which mostly involved peers (n=969; 84.4%). In contrast, 23.2% (n=519) of the adolescents experienced OSS with 2.6% (n=57) reporting subjectively negative online sexual interactions with peers and 22.2% (n=490) reporting online sexual interactions with adults, of which 10.4% (n=51) were perceived as negative. The findings suggest that adolescents frequently engage in sexual interactions on the Internet with only a relatively small number perceiving such contacts as exploitative. In addition, females and adolescents with incomplete family situation, foreign nationality, higher education, homo- or bisexual orientation, and those without perceived social support reported OSS significantly more often.

Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescent; Child sexual abuse; Intentional sexual experience; Online sexual behavior; Online sexual solicitation; Sexual victimization

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