The Phnom Penh Post

Changing attitudes to Valentine’s

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AS AN independen­t researcher on public health, I have compiled a report on youth attitudes to love and sex on Valentine’s Day, and how they have changed over the past 10 years.

Every five years since 2009, with campaigns launched to educate young people as to the meaning of Valentine’s Day, I conducted research on their attitudes to the holiday.

So have youth attitudes to Valentine’s Day changed over the past decade?

A total of 1,176 young people – 674 females and 502 males – between the ages of 15 and 24 and from fairly wealthy background­s in Phnom Penh were used in the study.

Research shows that Valentine’s

Day is now considered a special day by less than almost half of young people – 38.2 per cent compared to 61.2 per cent in 2009 – especially among youth who had a boyfriend or girlfriend (42.5 per cent compared to 81 per cent).

Most participan­ts said they still planned to go on a date on Valentine’s Day, but the locations had changed.

Whereas before they went to karaoke parlours, recreation­al areas like Koh Dach, Kien Svay and Bak Kheng and guesthouse­s, the current trend is to go places such as shopping malls and the cinema, 44 per cent of participan­ts said.

The change towards more public places suggests the pressure to have sex on Valentine’s has diminished. research with regard to youths conducting romantic activities such as going to lunch or dinner or to places of entertainm­ent on Valentine’s.

What is noticeable is that sexual relations among youth on Valentine’s Day decreased by more than half compared to 10 years earlier (12.4 per cent compared to 5.4 per cent in 2009).

What put pressure on the young to have sex on Valentine’s Day was spe- ning to have sex for the first time was around 50 per cent of the total who said they would have sex in 2019.

The proportion of young men who said they would have sex with their girlfriend without her consent or if she refused decreased from a decade ago, with 12 out of 40 saying they would compared to 17 out of 25 in 2009.

More than 50 per cent of young men said they expected to have sex with their girlfriend on Valentine’s Day, saying they would buy her a valuable gift to pressure her to do so.

Results show that little had changed over the past 10 years regarding parents educating their children as to Valentine’s Day.

The results of this research show there must be a focus on gender and sex education, especially regarding HIV and the use of condoms, before Valentine’s Day to increase knowledge on sexual health and safety, focusing on high schools and universiti­es in Cambodia.

 ?? SRENG MENG SRUN ?? A young couple looks at souvenirs at a shop set up for Valentine’s Day on Phnom Penh’s Koh Pich.
SRENG MENG SRUN A young couple looks at souvenirs at a shop set up for Valentine’s Day on Phnom Penh’s Koh Pich.

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