Social class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer.

The relationship between sexual behaviour and social class has been assessed in 370 women recruited at family planning clinics in eight cities in the United Kingdom. Women of lower social class, measured both by occupation and by age at completion of full-time education, experienced sexual intercour...

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Main Authors: Mant, D, Vessey, M, Loudon, N
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1988
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author Mant, D
Vessey, M
Loudon, N
author_facet Mant, D
Vessey, M
Loudon, N
author_sort Mant, D
collection OXFORD
description The relationship between sexual behaviour and social class has been assessed in 370 women recruited at family planning clinics in eight cities in the United Kingdom. Women of lower social class, measured both by occupation and by age at completion of full-time education, experienced sexual intercourse at an earlier age but accumulated fewer sexual partners than women of higher social class. These results are inconsistent with the idea that social classs differences in cervical cancer incidence and mortality can be ascribed to more promiscuous sexual behaviour in women of lower social class. They do not exclude the possibility of more promiscuous sexual behaviour in lower social class men, but they draw attention once again to the fact that early age at first intercourse may offer at least a partial explanation for the relationship between cervical cancer and social class.
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spelling oxford-uuid:fc9989ff-731c-46a3-8f49-98ad2f3f87a62022-03-27T13:22:00ZSocial class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:fc9989ff-731c-46a3-8f49-98ad2f3f87a6EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1988Mant, DVessey, MLoudon, NThe relationship between sexual behaviour and social class has been assessed in 370 women recruited at family planning clinics in eight cities in the United Kingdom. Women of lower social class, measured both by occupation and by age at completion of full-time education, experienced sexual intercourse at an earlier age but accumulated fewer sexual partners than women of higher social class. These results are inconsistent with the idea that social classs differences in cervical cancer incidence and mortality can be ascribed to more promiscuous sexual behaviour in women of lower social class. They do not exclude the possibility of more promiscuous sexual behaviour in lower social class men, but they draw attention once again to the fact that early age at first intercourse may offer at least a partial explanation for the relationship between cervical cancer and social class.
spellingShingle Mant, D
Vessey, M
Loudon, N
Social class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer.
title Social class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer.
title_full Social class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer.
title_fullStr Social class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer.
title_full_unstemmed Social class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer.
title_short Social class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer.
title_sort social class differences in sexual behaviour and cervical cancer
work_keys_str_mv AT mantd socialclassdifferencesinsexualbehaviourandcervicalcancer
AT vesseym socialclassdifferencesinsexualbehaviourandcervicalcancer
AT loudonn socialclassdifferencesinsexualbehaviourandcervicalcancer