Introduction
Issues of sexual and reproductive health are complex, particularly during adolescence. They represent a global cause for concern, especially in developing countries 1. Research has focused on sexual relations and their results, namely sexually transmitted diseases, unintended pregnancies, and HIV 2. In low and average-income countries, the pregnancy rate among girls younger than 15 is roughly one million 3, hence the need for new approaches to preventing pregnancy before the middle or late adolescence, focused on early adolescent women aged between 10 and 14. Girls in this age range face the biggest obstacles to achieving their full potential and development and display a lower ability to make good life decisions related to their sexual and reproductive health 4.
This population of early adolescent girls is generally considered sexually inactive but is indeed the opposite 5. A study in Taiwan revealed that this population displayed a high level of sexual activity regarding kisses, caresses, and contemplating the possibility of sexual relations 6. These results showed that adolescent girls were conscious of their erotic feelings and sexual desire 6.
According to the social cognitive theory, a person's self-efficacy and belief in their ability to adopt a particular behavior in a specific situation are related to their skills and knowledge of their actual conduct 7. Therefore, adolescents' favorable opinions of themselves as sexual beings improve their ability to identify sexual risks and take actions to ensure the safety of their sexual health and well-being 8. This way, the consolidation and development of the sexual self-concept during early adolescence become essential.
The sexual self-concept comprises sexual behaviors, attitudes, feelings, self-esteem, and self-confidence 9. Moreover, it is a multidimensional construct that includes negative or positive perceptions and feelings about oneself as a sexual being 8. During adolescence, a person's sexual self-concept evolves along with their development and growth and becomes established in future sexual conduct 10.
Presently, scales have been devised to analyze the sexual self-concept among women. Nonetheless, despite it being necessary, few studies have focused on measuring the sexual self-concept as a predictor of sexual activity among early adolescent girls 10,11.
In healthcare, measurements carried out in the biophysical dimension have been predominant, but the biophysical approach does not consider the subjective attributes of the different phenomena 12. Consequently, there arises the need for instruments that evaluate the subjective properties of constructs and dimensions, which are necessary to direct actions for treating, preventing, or promoting health. Scales allow for analyzing the unmeasurable physical, social, and psychological dimensions through observation. The information must be obtained validly and reliably 13.
In our search for instruments, particularly those related to the sexual and reproductive health of early adolescent girls, we performed the transcultural adaptation of the Sexual Self-concept Inventory (SSCI) in English 14 to analyze how prepared the girls were in terms of sexual maturity. This instrument helps predict sexual health and well-being, including positive affect and the assessment of sexual desire 15,16. Previous studies showed that sexual arousability and agency were linked to sexual self-esteem and future orientation toward positive sexuality, with a low desire to engage in sexual relations 5.
Sexual arousability is the feeling or right to engage in sexual activities. When adolescent women have a people-oriented perspective on sexuality, pregnancy and early-first-sexual-relation rates diminish. The sexual agency represents the positive assessments of sexuality through thoughts, feelings, behaviors, and body perceptions within the sexual context. Generally, adolescents with higher sexual self-esteem feel safer in sexuality-related situations 5,10.
Sexual anxiety refers to tensions, nuisances, and negative assessments of sexuality. It manifests through abstinence, low possibility of engaging in sexual relations soon, not having a partner, or taking very little part in erotic expressions. As mentioned earlier, this SSCI is valid for analyzing the opinions of early adolescent girls on their sexuality and sexual behavior and could be helpful in healthcare studies and risk-related decision-making 5,10,17.
This study aims to establish the validity and reliability of the SSCI in Spanish among the Colombian population of Santander.
Materials and methods
In this methodological study, we used psychometric samples to determine the reliability and dependability of the SSCI in Spanish. Reliability refers to the accuracy with which the instrument evaluates the attributes for which it was built. Those attributes show a correlation between the items that make up the construct, which need to be homogenous 18. Dependability is the ability of an instrument to consistently measure an element reflected by Cronbach's alpha coefficient, which reveals how far the items go in measuring the construct. This property is related to the validity of the instrument 19.
Participants
Participants in this study comprised adolescent girls aged between 10 and 14. A nonprobability convenience sample was used, with a sample parameter of between 5 and 10 persons per instrument item 20. The sample included 308 early adolescent schoolgirls from two institutions in the urban area of Girón municipality in Santander, Colombia. The girls had to fulfill the following criteria: be early adolescents aged between 10 and 14 and take part in the study voluntarily with informed consent from their parents. We did not consider adolescent girls with cognitive disorders or sensory alterations.
Instrument
We applied the Spanish version of the SSCI obtained through a methodological process of transcultural adaptation 14 of the SSCI for early adolescent girls 5. This inventory comprises three dimensions: sexual arousability (17 items), sexual agency (ten items), and negative sexual affect (seven items). We used a Likert-scale questionnaire with six possible answers to measure the 34 items: the higher the score, the better the sexual self-concept.
Procedure
Once we obtained the parents' informed consent and the adolescents' assent, we administered the SSCI for early adolescent girls in classrooms during periods agreed upon with the two public schools in Girón, Santander, thereby ensuring the reliability of the participants' data.
Data analysis
We carried out a descriptive analysis of the sociodemographic variables using percentage distribution. We then determined the results of the items and the median, maximum/minimum score, and standard deviation by descriptive statistics. We calculated the reliability of the SSCI for early adolescent girls in Spanish using Cronbach's alpha coefficient, which reflected an excellent internal consistency, ranging between 0.7 and 0.9 21. As part of the process of adapting the instrument, we employed the correlation matrix to confirm the proper use of factorial analysis (FA), which integrates the variability of the items and correlations. When there are various item pairs with correlations above 0.3, we can perform the FA. However, we employ statistical techniques such as the reverse correlation, Bartlett's test, or the Kaiser Meyer Olkin (KMO) test when it is not easy to notice. The latter provides enough information to decide whether we could use FA as a statistical strategy in scale validation 22.
Ethical considerations
The research protocol was approved by the bioethics committee at Universidad Cooperativa de Colombia and authorized by the schools in Girón, following the international guidelines for bioethical research on human beings and the WMA Declaration of Helsinki 23. Moreover, according to Law 911 of 2004 24 and Resolution 8430 of 1993 25, Colombia's Health Department deemed this research risk-free as it did not involve any medical treatments or manipulation of the participants' behavior. Initially, we requested institutional permission at a management level. Then, we contacted parents to inform them about our objectives and procedures, emphasizing that participation was voluntary and that data would remain confidential. We also informed them that they could withdraw their children from the study at any time without any legal or social consequences and allow the children to take part in the study only by signed informed consent. At the end of this process, we called the participants to obtain their informed consent, providing them with the same information above, i.e., reliability of the information, the anonymity of the answers, and the possibility to withdraw from the study voluntarily at any time. In addition, we assured them that their data would not appear in any reports, presentations, or academic publications related to the study. As for the psychometric process related to the Spanish version of the instrument, we obtained permission from the instrument's rightful creator.
Results
We administered the Spanish version of the SSCI to 308 adolescent girls from two schools. The girls were between 10 and 14 years old and had an education level that ranged between sixth (31 °%), seventh (32 °%), eighth (22 °%), ninth (10 °%), and tenth grade (4 °%).
We analyzed the baseline Cronbach's alpha to establish the internal consistency of the instrument. For the full scale, it was 0.89, whereas, for factors one, two, and three, it was 0.908, 0.812, and 0.572, respectively. We noticed that factors one and two displayed an acceptable coefficient, while factor three displayed a lower score, which can be explained by the fact that it had fewer items than the other factors (Table 1).
Scale/Dimensions | Descriptive Statistics | Cronbach's Alpha | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
N | Min. | Max. | M | DT | Value | No elements | |
SSCI | 308 | 1.11 | 5.47 | 3.17 | 0.80 | 0.89 | 34 |
Sexual arousability | 308 | 1 | 5.64 | 2.52 | 0.97 | 0.91 | 17 |
Sexual agency | 308 | 1 | 6 | 3.75 | 1.12 | 0.81 | 10 |
Negative sexual affect | 308 | 1 | 6 | 3.90 | 0.97 | 0.57 | 7 |
Source: Own elaboration
The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test for assessing normality was significant for the SSCI (p = .001). The median score on the SSCI among the participant population was 3.17, while the sexual arousability factor was 2.52, the sexual agency factor was 3.8, and the negative sexual affect factor was 3.9 (Figure 1).
We used the sample adequacy tests from the KMO data matrix (sample adequacy measure) and Bartlett's test of sphericity to analyze the data. In our case, the KMO indicated that the variables measured common factors with a value of 0.85 and a Bartlett test with p = 0.000. Thus, the data was suitable for the analysis.
Using factor analysis with the extraction of the principal components and varimax rotation of the three factors, we considered the items with a value higher than 0.4. When revising the communality of the 34 items, we discovered that not all of them corresponded with the initial factor (Table 2).
ITEMS | F1 | F2 | F3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
ES1 | I sometimes think I'd like to try doing the sexual things that my friends are doing with their boyfriends | 0.627 | 0.001 | -0.155 |
ES2 | When I kiss a boy, I get hot | 0.664 | 0.142 | 0.092 |
ES3 | I would really like to touch a boyfriend if we were left alone together | 0.721 | 0.109 | -0.069 |
ES4 | I sometimes want to know how different types of sex feel | 0.663 | 0.142 | -0.092 |
ES5 | If I'm going to see a guy I like, I like to dress sexy | 0.427 | 0.427 | -0.063 |
ES6 | If a guy kisses me, I also want him to touch my body | 0.624 | 0.098 | -0.017 |
ES7 | When I flirt with a guy, I like to feel him up | 0.378 | 0.457 | -0.028 |
ES8 | Sometimes I dress sexy to get attention from guys | 0.370 | 0.324 | -0.023 |
ES9 | If I were to kiss a guy, I'd get really turned on | 0.557 | 0.171 | 0.106 |
ES10 | There are things about sex I want to try | 0.811 | 0.45 | -0.158 |
ES11 | If a boy kisses me, my body feels good | 0.571 | 0.385 | -0.126 |
ES12 | I enjoy talking about sex or talking sexy with boys I know really well | 0.724 | 0.190 | -0.087 |
ES13 | If I were kissing and touching a guy, I would get hyped, real excited | 0.772 | 0.187 | 0.008 |
ES14 | I enjoy talking about sex with my girl friends | 0.727 | 0.112 | 0.062 |
ES15 | It's okay to feel up on a guy | 0.328 | 0.664 | -0.196 |
ES16 | I like it when a guy tells me I look good | 0.114 | 0.653 | -0.138 |
ES17 | I think I'm ready to have sex | 0.693 | -0.043 | -0.117 |
AS1 | Girls always wonder what sex is going to be like the first time | 0.499 | 0.473 | -0.003 |
AS2 | I sometimes think about who I would want to have sex with | 0.680 | 0.307 | -0.012 |
AS3 | When I decide to have sex with a guy, it will be because I wanted to have sex and not because he really wanted me to have sex with him | 0.067 | 0.585 | -0.116 |
AS4 | Girls sometimes have sex because they're curious and want to see what it's like | 0.359 | 0.498 | 0.082 |
AS5 | Sex is best with a guy you love | 0.090 | 0.679 | 0.142 |
AS6 | I like to let a guy know when I like him | 0.258 | 0.461 | -0.062 |
AS7 | If I have sex, my friends will want to know all about it | 0.396 | 0.379 | 0.330 |
AS8 | If I had sex with a guy, I would be running the risk of being played (taken advantage of) | 0.013 | 0.590 | 0.047 |
AS9 | Flirting is fun, and I am good at it | 0.440 | 0.323 | -0.042 |
AS10 | If I have sex with a guy, I would worry that I could get my feelings really hurt | 0.092 | 0.681 | 0.252 |
ESN1 | If I kiss a guy I don't really know, I'm afraid of what people will think about me | -0.045 | 0.414 | 0.257 |
ESN2 | Sex is nasty | -0.018 | -0.116 | 0.640 |
ESN3 | Sex isn't fun for girls my age | -0.111 | -0.039 | 0.534 |
ESN4 | I would be scared to be really alone with a boyfriend | -0.111 | -0.135 | 0.490 |
ESN5 | Some girls have sex just to be accepted or popular | -0.036 | 0.398 | 0.534 |
ESN6 | I think I am too young to have sex | -0.397 | 0.264 | 0.416 |
ESN7 | If I have sex, my friends will want to know all about it | 0.329 | 0.262 | 0.496 |
Note: F1 = Sexual arousability, F2 = Sexual agency, F3 = Negative sexual affect.
Source: Own elaboration
The total explained variance for the factor variables stands at 43.261 % for the 34 items that make up the SSCI, as seen below in Table 3.
Component | Initial self-values | Rotation sums of squared loadings | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | Variance % | Accumulated % | Total | Variance % | Accumulated % | |
1 | 9.605 | 28.249 | 28.249 | 7.762 | 22.828 | 22.828 |
2 | 3.335 | 9.808 | 38.057 | 4.835 | 14.222 | 37.050 |
3 | 1.769 | 5.204 | 43.261 | 2.112 | 6.211 | 43.261 |
Extraction method: Principal component analysis.
Source: Results from the statistical package SPSS V.
Considering that for the sexual arousability factor, which included items between 1 and 17 in the original version, three items, namely, 7, 11, and 15, are now excluded and subsequently assigned to factor two. In addition, items AS1, AS2, AS7, and AS9 are moved from factor two (sexual agency) to factor one, leaving factor one with 18 items. Therefore, factor two keeps six original items, plus items 7, 11, and 15 from factor one, and items ESN1 and ESN5 from factor three (negative sexual affect), totaling eleven items. Lastly, factor three keeps five items from the original scale and item ES5, which has a similar value within two factors left there according to the original scale. Table 4 shows the scale with the rearranged items.
SEXUAL AROUSABILITY DIMENSION | SEXUAL AGENCY DIMENSION | NEGATIVE SEXUAL AFFECT DIMENSION | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Items | No. | Items | No. | Items |
ES1 | I sometimes think I'd like to try doing the sexual things that my friends are doing with their boyfriends | AS3 | When I decide to have sex with a guy, it will be because I wanted to have sex and not because he really wanted me to have sex with him | ESN2 | Sex is nasty |
ES2 | When I kiss a boy, I get hot | AS4 | Girls sometimes have sex because they're curious and want to see what it's like | ESN3 | Sex isn't fun for girls my age |
ES3 | I would really like to touch a boyfriend if we were left alone together | AS5 | Sex is best with a guy you love | ESN4 | I would be scared to be really alone with a boyfriend |
ES4 | I sometimes want to know how different types of sex feel | AS6 | I like to let a guy know when I like him | ESN6 | I think I am too young to have sex |
ES5 | If I'm going to see a guy I like, I like to dress sexy | AS8 | If I had sex with a guy, I would be running the risk of being played (taken advantage of) | ESN7 | If I have sex, my friends will want to know all about it |
ES6 | If a guy kisses me, I also want him to touch my body | AS10 | If I have sex with a guy, I would worry that I could get my feelings really hurt | ||
ES8 | Sometimes I dress sexy to get attention from guys | ES7* | When I flirt with a guy, I like to feel him up | ||
ES9 | If I were to kiss a guy, I'd get really turned on | ES11* | If a boy kisses me, my body feels good | ||
ES10 | There are things about sex I want to try | ES15 | It's okay to feel up on a guy | ||
I enjoy talking about sex or | If I kiss a guy I don't really know, | ||||
ES12 | talking sexy with boys I know really well | ESN1* | I'm afraid of what people will think about me | ||
ES13 | If I were kissing and touching a guy, I would get hyped, real excited | ESN5* | Some girls have sex just to be accepted or popular | ||
ES14 | I enjoy talking about sex with my girl friends | ||||
ES16 | I like it when a guy tells me I look good | ||||
ES17 | I think I'm ready to have sex | ||||
AS1 * | Girls always wonder what sex is going to be like the first time | ||||
AS2 * | I sometimes think about who I would want to have sex with | ||||
AS7 * | If I have sex, my friends will want to know all about it | ||||
AS9 * | Flirting is fun, and I am good at it | ||||
Subtotal: 18 items | Subtotal: 11 items | Subtotal: 5 items |
*Items from the original scale, rearranged
Source: Own elaboration
Discussion
The thorough methodological process developed throughout this psychometrics-based study allows us to evaluate the SSCI in Spanish, for which we frequently used Cronbach's alpha coefficient. This enabled us to identify the level of accuracy of the adaptation process, after which we would be able to interpret the scores obtained appropriately to generate more accurate, unquestionable knowledge 26,27.
The sexual self-concept has been considered a predictor of the sexuality of early adolescent girls6, departing from the definition of the sexual self-concept as a person's perception of their sexual self 8. In present times, sexual self-concept scales in the adoles cent population have been developed 5, which require validation within the various contexts that involve early adolescents. That is why our study in Colombia, whose sample of 308 participants from a school environment was lower than the one in Taiwan (590) and higher than the one in New York (180), highlighted the fact that the instrument obtained similar reliability 5 overall, although lower when it came to the negative sexual affect dimension 28. The explained variance in our study (43.261 °%) is different from the one in the New York version, reflecting a higher development of the scale. In addition, we did not include data on puberty-, family- or religious-related development.
The SSCI for early adolescent girls adapted in this study represents a tool to analyze dimensions like sexual arousability, which has been studied and referred to as a trait and component of sexual response, aiding the development of a positive assessment of sexual ability. Knowledge of its response tendency will allow us to evaluate interactions with others and the pleasant experience of sexuality with improvements in sexual self-esteem 29.
The sexual self-concept significantly influences knowledge related to sexual health, as it represents a mediatory factor for the protection and treatment of adolescents' sexual behaviors 28. A different study 30 has analyzed the direct correlation between the positive/negative sexual self-concept and safe intercourse, enabling people to adopt healthy sexual behaviors. According to other authors, self-concept and self-efficacy contribute to developing self-care conduct, motivating people to adopt behaviors beneficial to their health 31.
The results showcase good reliability of the factors, with the exploratory factor analysis reproducing the structure in the original version of the scale, which indicated that it was suitable for use among the Colombian population. The results are promising; thus, further research on other validity evidence could make the Colombian version of the scale more solid, following the established psychometric standards.
Conclusions
The SSCI, designed as a sexual predictor among early adolescent girls, displays an excellent psychometric quality in our study. Further studies on its predictive capacity, with evidence of validity based on the link with other variables, can contribute to this instrument becoming useful for predicting sexual conduct in diverse cultural contexts.
Our adapted instrument helps develop research and comparison with other similar instruments, including the participation of parents and teachers in interventions related to sexual and reproductive health.
In the results obtained through exploratory factor analysis, the items were rearranged based on the observed interrelations and higher affinity with the respective factor. This modified the original scale, which means that further studies should be conducted using the adjusted scale and comparing the results to verify the scale's internal structure.