Factors related to contraceptive behavior among socially disadvantaged adolescents in southwestern Mexico

Authors

  • Alan Josué Ramírez Calderón Autonomous University of Nuevo León image/svg+xml
  • Raquel Alicia Benavides Torres Autonomous University of Nuevo León image/svg+xml
  • Jacob Martinez The University of Texas at El Paso image/svg+xml
  • Dora Julia Onofre Rodríguez Autonomous University of Nuevo León image/svg+xml
  • Yesenia Ramírez Espinobarros Autonomous University of Nuevo León image/svg+xml

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19136/hs.a25n1.6177

Abstract

Objective: To determine the direct and indirect effects between individual background (sex, gender violence), social background (occupation), information background (contraceptive knowledge), attitudes toward contraceptive use, peer norms toward sexuality, contraceptive self-efficacy, and intention toward contraceptive use with contraceptive behavior of socially disadvantaged adolescents.

Materials and methods: A cross-sectional correlational-predictive study was conducted in 247 sexually active adolescents, residents of socially underprivileged communities in the states of Oaxaca and Guerrero, Mexico. A structural equation model was developed using AMOS version 23 statistical software.

Results: The adjusted model explained 19% of the variance, where positive attitudes towards contraceptive use (β=.22, p<.01), intention to use contraception (β=.22, p<.001), contraceptive self-efficacy (β=.13, p<.05) and occupation (β=.15, p<.01) were directly and positively related to increased contraceptive behavior, while gender-based violence (β=-.19, p<.01) was negatively related.

Conclusions: Intention towards contraceptive use, positive attitudes towards contraceptive use, contraceptive self-efficacy and occupation were direct and positive predictors of contraceptive behavior of socially disadvantaged adolescents, while gender-based violence was directly and negatively related to this outcome variable. Understanding the factors that influence contraceptive behavior in adolescents living in poverty is essential for the design of programs aimed at preventing unwanted pregnancies.

 

Keywords: Contraceptives; Adolescents; Social Disadvantage in Health; Poverty.

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Author Biographies

  • Alan Josué Ramírez Calderón, Autonomous University of Nuevo León

    Master of Science in Nursing. PhD student. Faculty of Nursing. Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León. Monterey, Nuevo León. Mexico.

  • Raquel Alicia Benavides Torres, Autonomous University of Nuevo León

    Doctor of Philosophy. Professor and Researcher. Faculty of Nursing. Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León. Monterey, Nuevo León. Mexico.

  • Jacob Martinez, The University of Texas at El Paso

    Doctor of Philosophy. Profesor e investigador, College of Nursing. The University of Texas at El Paso. El Paso, Texas. USA.

  • Dora Julia Onofre Rodríguez, Autonomous University of Nuevo León

    Doctor of Philosophy. Professor and Researcher. Faculty of Nursing. Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León. Monterey, Nuevo León. Mexico.

  • Yesenia Ramírez Espinobarros, Autonomous University of Nuevo León

    PhD in Nursing Sciences. Faculty of Nursing. Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León. Monterey, Nuevo León. Mexico.

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Published

2026-02-11

Issue

Section

Research article

How to Cite

Ramírez Calderón, A. J., Benavides Torres, R. A., Martinez, J., Onofre Rodríguez, D. J., & Ramírez Espinobarros, Y. (2026). Factors related to contraceptive behavior among socially disadvantaged adolescents in southwestern Mexico. Horizonte Sanitario, 25(1), e6177. https://doi.org/10.19136/hs.a25n1.6177