# Parent-Teen Sexual Health Communication and Teens’ Health Information and Service Seeking

**Authors:** Hannah Javidi, Jorge V. Verlenden, Xiwei Chen, Eric R. Walsh-Buhi

PMC · DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.41712 · JAMA Network Open · 2025-11-05

## TL;DR

Frequent parent-teen sexual health conversations help teens feel more confident to seek health information and services, but only if parents are informed and comfortable.

## Contribution

The study reveals that the impact of parent-teen communication on teen self-efficacy depends on parents' perceived knowledge and comfort.

## Key findings

- Frequent communication increased teen self-efficacy when parents felt informed and comfortable.
- Frequent communication decreased teen self-efficacy when parents lacked information or comfort.
- Parents with higher education or income were less likely to communicate about sexual health.

## Abstract

Is the frequency of parent-teen sexual health communication associated with teens’ self-efficacy to seek sexual and reproductive health (SRH) information and services?

In this cross-sectional study of 522 parent-teen dyads, frequent communication was associated with higher teen self-efficacy when parents felt informed and comfortable. When parents did not feel informed or comfortable, frequent communication was associated with decreases in teen self-efficacy.

This study suggests that parents must have quality information and strategies to increase comfort around sexual health conversations, which may in turn be associated with higher levels of teens’ confidence to seek SRH information and services when needed.

Parent-teen sexual health communication can support and empower teens in their sexual and reproductive health (SRH) decision-making. These conversations may differ in their associations with teen health outcomes across parent-teen dynamics and parents’ knowledge about and comfort with the topic.

To investigate parent and teen characteristics associated with the frequency of parent-teen sexual health communication, parent information adequacy, and parent communication comfort and the association between communication frequency and teens’ self-efficacy to seek SRH information and services and to examine the moderating effects of parents’ perceived information adequacy and communication comfort.

This cross-sectional survey comprised a probability sample of 522 parent-teen (aged 15-17 years) dyads representative of the US household population from the 2022 Teen and Parent Surveys of Health. Participants were recruited from AmeriSpeak and AmeriSpeak Teen panels, administered by the National Opinion Research Center (University of Chicago) from May 12 to September 30, 2022. Statistical analysis was performed from February to May 2024.

The frequency of parent-teen sexual health communication and teens’ self-efficacy to seek SRH information and services. Moderators were parent information adequacy and communication comfort. All analyses were weighted.

Of 522 parents, most were female (377 [61.3%]), 45 years of age or older (214 [53.5%]), White (309 [57.0%]), and had less than a bachelor’s degree (325 [56.7%]). Of 522 teens, half were male (244 [50.3%]), and most were heterosexual (394 [79.8%]). Female parents (54.5% [95% CI, 48.6%-60.2%]; P = .001), parents aged 18 to 44 years (58.0% [95% CI, 51.3%-64.4%]; P < .001), and Black parents (74.3% [95% CI, 56.5%-86.6%]; P = .01) communicated about sexual health most frequently. Parents with a Bachelor’s degree or higher (36.8% [95% CI, 30.0%-47.9%]; P = .03) and household incomes higher than $100 000 (31.1% [95% CI, 22.6%-41.1%]; P < .001) were significantly less likely to communicate about sexual health. Teens whose parents talked frequently had higher self-efficacy when parents were more informed (β = 0.11 [95% CI, 0.03-0.20]; P = .01) and more comfortable (β = 0.11 [95% CI, 0.01-0.20]; P = .03); however, if parents were not informed or comfortable, frequent communication was associated with lower teen self-efficacy.

In a cross-sectional, nationally representative survey of 522 parent-teen dyads, frequent parent-teen sexual health communication was associated with increased teen self-efficacy for SRH information and service seeking, but this depended on how comfortable and informed their parents felt. These findings suggest that parents must possess accurate information and comfort to discuss sexual health topics.

This cross-sectional study examines the association of the frequency of parent-teen sexual health communication with teens’ self-efficacy to seek sexual and reproductive health information and services.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HIV or sexually transmitted infections (MESH:D012749), sexual (MESH:D050035), SRH (MESH:D060737), HIV (MESH:D015658)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

61 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12590298/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12590298