Weiqi Chen
10 Papers
Weiqi Chen is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Condom & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Sexual Compulsivity Mediates the Association Between Childhood Sexual Abuse and Condom Use Resistance Among Men Who Have Sex with Men and Women.
Mitchell Kirwan,Robin J D Stewart,Weiqi Chen,Julia F. Hammett,Kelly Cue Davis +4 more
TL;DR: Intervention programs seeking to reduce the transmission of HIV and other STIs should prioritize targeting MSMW who experienced CSA to reduce sexual compulsivity and increase condom use.
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Coercive condom use resistance: A scoping review.
TL;DR: Burgeoning evidence indicates that coercive CUR is relatively common, and, particularly for men, risk factors are similar to those associated with sexual aggression more generally, with men reporting higher prevalence of coercive CUR perpetration than women.
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Associations Among Alcohol-Related Factors and Men's Nonconsensual Condom Removal Perpetration.
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examined the associations between event-level drinking, daily drinking, drinking motives, alcohol expectancies, and non-consensual condom removal (NCCR).
1
Alcohol and Emotion Regulation Interventions: Effects on Men's Sexual Arousal, Impulsivity, Cognitions Regarding Sexual Consequences, and Sexually Coercive Tactics
Weiqi Chen,Julia F. Hammett +1 more
Abstract: Alcohol's cognitive effects exacerbate sexual assault perpetration by men against women. Emotion regulation interventions may reduce perpetration by modifying men's responses during sexual situations. The present study's goal was to examine how alcohol intoxication and emotion regulation interventions interacted to predict men's cognitive and behavioral reactions regarding sexual assault perpetration. Young men with self-reported sexual assault perpetration histories (N = 206) were randomly assigned to receive either a cognitive restructuring, mindfulness, or control intervention and to consume alcoholic or non-alcoholic beverages before projecting themselves into a hypothetical, sexual scenario and completing in-the-moment assessments of their sexual arousal, impulsivity, cognitions, and sexual coercion. Results revealed that intoxicated men in the control intervention experienced more sexual arousal. Sexual arousal was subsequently associated with impulsivity, cognitions regarding sexual consequences, and sexual coercion. Findings support emotion regulation interventions as tools to prevent alcohol-involved perpetration and suggest a mechanism through which perpetration may be prevented.