Attitudes of U.S. and Czech/Slovak mental health and health professionals toward five types of sexually explicit materials
Autor: | Beatrice 'Bean' E. Robinson, Jan Koznar, Robin Manthei, Karen Scheltema |
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Rok vydání: | 1996 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Mental Health Services medicine.medical_specialty Slovakia Health Personnel Poison control Suicide prevention Occupational safety and health Religiosity Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) Injury prevention medicine Erotica Humans General Psychology Czech Republic Retrospective Studies Public health Middle Aged Mental health Attitude Workforce Conviction Female Psychology Clinical psychology |
Zdroj: | Archives of sexual behavior. 25(6) |
ISSN: | 0004-0002 |
Popis: | Mental health and health professionals' attitudes toward sexually explicit materials in the U.S. and Czech/Slovak Republics were investigated. An instrument measuring attitudes toward educational, soft-core, hard-core, violence, and bizarre/paraphiliac sexually explicit materials was administered to sexologists, psychologist/counselors, and medical professionals. These professionals were attending conferences in the U.S. and the Czech/Slovak Republics between November 1992 and September 1993. Mental health and health professionals had the most favorable attitudes toward educational sexually explicit materials followed by soft-core and hard-core materials, respectively. They had unfavorable attitudes toward violent and bizarre/paraphiliac sexually explicit materials, with particularly negative attitudes toward violent materials. Analysis of covariance showed that strength of religious conviction was a significant covariate; thus professionals with stronger religious conviction had more negative attitudes toward all five types of sexually explicit materials. When controlling for strength of religious conviction: (i) sexologists had more positive attitudes toward most types of sexually explicit materials; (ii) Czech professionals generally had more positive attitudes toward such materials than their U.S. counterparts; and (iii) there were few differences between female and male professionals in their reported attitudes. While previous literature has reported gender differences in attitudes toward sexually explicit materials, findings from this study suggest that this effect may be due to differences in religiosity among women and men, namely, that women tend to be more religious. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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