Kristen N. Jozkowski

William L. Yarber Endowed Professor of Sexual Health

Internal and external sexual consent during events that involved alcohol, cannabis, or both.


Journal article


Malachi Willis, T. Marcantonio, K. Jozkowski
Sexual Health, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Willis, M., Marcantonio, T., & Jozkowski, K. (2021). Internal and external sexual consent during events that involved alcohol, cannabis, or both. Sexual Health.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Willis, Malachi, T. Marcantonio, and K. Jozkowski. “Internal and External Sexual Consent during Events That Involved Alcohol, Cannabis, or Both.” Sexual Health (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Willis, Malachi, et al. “Internal and External Sexual Consent during Events That Involved Alcohol, Cannabis, or Both.” Sexual Health, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{malachi2021a,
  title = {Internal and external sexual consent during events that involved alcohol, cannabis, or both.},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Sexual Health},
  author = {Willis, Malachi and Marcantonio, T. and Jozkowski, K.}
}

Abstract

BACKGROUND Substance-involved sexual activity is common. Even though people recognise that substance-related impairment can be a barrier to people's ability to consent to sexual activity, most do not believe that substance use automatically negates sexual consent. We extended previous work on substance-related effects on internal and external consent by investigating sexual events that involved alcohol, cannabis, or both.

METHODS For 28 days, 113 participants (MAge = 29.2 years, 57.5% women, 70.8% White) responded to three surveys per day on their personal devices. At time points when participants reported having engaged in partnered sexual activity, they were asked to report their alcohol use, cannabis use, internal consent feelings, and external consent communication.

RESULTS Across 1189 partnered sexual events, 31.5% involved alcohol, cannabis, or both. Sexual events that involved combined use were associated with diminished feelings of safety/comfort and feelings that the sexual act was consensual, compared with events that involved neither substance. Greater levels of alcohol consumption were descriptively associated with lower ratings of internal sexual consent.

CONCLUSIONS We found that combined use of alcohol and cannabis may lead to lower internal sexual consent than using either substance alone - potentially due to greater levels of impairment associated with polysubstance use. Sexual health education programs should consider more nuanced approaches to teaching people how to navigate substance use and sexual consent.

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