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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Jul 13.
Published in final edited form as: Soc Forces. 2019 May 29;98(3):1370–1401. doi: 10.1093/sf/soz049
No intercourse Intercourse, no contraception Intercourse with hormonal Intercourse with coital only
β OR β OR β OR β OR
Ref: no intercourse
Desire for sex+ -- .34 1.40 *** .36 1.43 *** .25 1.29 ***
-- (.07) (.09) (.04) (.06) (.03) (.04)
Constant -- −4.92 .01 * −1.61 .20 −2.59 .07 *
-- (2.04) (.01) (1.39) (.28) (1.25) (.09)
Ref: intercourse, no contraception
Desire for sex+ −.34 .71 *** -- .02 1.02 −.08 .92
(.07) (.05) -- (.07) (.07) (.06) (.06)
Constant 4.92 136.52 * -- 3.30 27.19 2.32 10.20
(2.04) (278.40) -- (2.25) (61.24) (2.15) (21.96)
Ref: intercourse with hormonal
Desire for sex+ −.36 .70 *** −.02 .98 -- −.10 .90 *
(.04) (.03) (.07) (.07) -- (.04) (.04)
Constant 1.61 5.02 −3.30 .04 -- −.98 .38
(1.39) (7.00) (2.25) (.08) (1.64) (.61)

Note: In all models, the sample is comprised of all of respondents’ study weeks (N=54,068 weeks among 925 respondents). The reference category of the dependent variable is denoted with --. All models adjust for the same controls as in Table 2 (except for current sexual and contraceptive behavior which are captured in the dependent variable).

Standard errors, clustered by respondent, in parentheses,

***

p<0.001,

**

p<0.01,

*

p<0.05

+

Measures are lagged and reflect respondents’ situation as of the prior week.