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The social networking site may help prevent the spread of sexually-transmitted diseases, a new study suggests. Researchers from the University of Colorado found that sexual health advice on the site encouraged condom use among teenagers, decreasing the chance of them spreading STDs. They recruited 1, young adults between 18 and 24 for the study. Another group signed up to a Facebook page called News, which provided general news items targeted to the age group.
The idea was to see whether receiving updates from a sexual health-based page - rather than a general news page - made the young adults more likely to wear condoms. When the researchers conducted a survey two months later, they found 68 per cent of people signed up to the sexual advice site had used condoms during their last sexual encounter, compared to just 56 per cent in the news group.
Furthermore, the proportion of sexual acts where a condom had been used was 63 per cent in the first group, but only 57 per cent in the news group. Lead researcher Sheana Bull said the use of social media such as Facebook to influence sexual behaviour was novel. The peak age for an infection in women is between 19 and 20 years, and in men between 20 and 23 years. Of all year olds diagnosed with an STI, at least 11 per cent of women and 12 per cent of men will become re-infected within a year.
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