Abstract

Recent reports of declining prevalence of vaginal intercourse (VI) experience among adolescent men are largely silent on differences by race and ethnicity. This visualization illustrates trends by race/ethnicity in VI experience, average age at first VI, and age-specific cumulative probabilities of VI experience for young men, using retrospective data from multiple rounds of the National Survey of Family Growth covering 2006 to 2019. The authors find that although VI engagement is declining universally, the decline is substantially more pronounced among Black men than among their White and Hispanic peers. Although young Black men continue to engage in VI at higher rates and earlier ages, recent trends are narrowing long-standing racial/ethnic differences.

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