El-Bassel Nabila, Gilbert Louisa, Rajah Valli
Social Intervention Group, Columbia University School of Social Work, 622 West 113th Street, New York, NY 10025, USA.
Addict Behav. 2003 Oct;28(8):1385-403. doi: 10.1016/s0306-4603(02)00266-6.
Through in-depth interviews with 38 women recruited from methadone maintenance treatment programs (MMTPs), this paper examines subjective experiences regarding the effects of illicit drugs on the women's sexual behavior and that of their male sexual partners, mainly changes in libido, performance, and pleasure.
This paper addresses several questions: (1) How does drug use affect women's sexual performance? (2) How does drug use affect their partners' sexual performance and the sexual dynamics in their relationship? (3) How does drug use affect these women and their partners differently? (4) How are sexual disparities between women and their partners, heightened by drug use, linked with sexual and physical violence and risk of HIV?
Three major themes are discussed: some women believe that drugs, particularly heroin, increase their sexual performance, libido, and pleasure, but for others, drugs, particularly crack cocaine, inhibit their sexual performance and desire. Many of the women believe that crack cocaine and heroin enhance a man's sexual desire, performance, and pleasure. However, other women deem that these drugs are responsible for their partners' abusive and coercive behavior. The data further indicate that gender disparities, in how crack cocaine and heroin affect the sexual dynamics between drug-involved couples, often lead to sexual coercion and physical abuse.
This in-depth narrative study of abused women in MMTPs draws implications from their subjective experiences for understanding the contextual mechanisms linking drug use, intimate sexual abuse, and HIV risk. It also suggests implications for designing HIV prevention programs that take into account the differential effects of drugs on sexual intimate violence and HIV risk. Education about the effects of drugs on sexuality and on the risks of sexual violence and HIV transmission is crucial for drug-involved women.
通过对从美沙酮维持治疗项目(MMTPs)招募的38名女性进行深入访谈,本文考察了关于非法药物对女性及其男性性伴侣性行为影响的主观体验,主要是性欲、性表现和性快感方面的变化。
本文探讨了几个问题:(1)吸毒如何影响女性的性表现?(2)吸毒如何影响其伴侣的性表现以及他们关系中的性互动?(3)吸毒对这些女性及其伴侣的影响有何不同?(4)吸毒加剧的女性与其伴侣之间的性差异如何与性暴力、身体暴力及感染艾滋病毒的风险相关联?
讨论了三个主要主题:一些女性认为毒品,尤其是海洛因,会增强她们的性表现、性欲和性快感,但对另一些女性来说,毒品,尤其是快克可卡因,会抑制她们的性表现和性欲。许多女性认为快克可卡因和海洛因会增强男性的性欲、性表现和性快感。然而,其他女性认为这些毒品导致了伴侣的虐待和强迫行为。数据进一步表明,快克可卡因和海洛因对涉毒情侣间性互动的影响存在性别差异,这往往会导致性胁迫和身体虐待。
这项对MMTPs中受虐女性的深入叙述性研究从她们的主观体验中得出了一些启示,有助于理解将吸毒、亲密性虐待和感染艾滋病毒风险联系起来的背景机制。这也为设计考虑到毒品对性暴力和感染艾滋病毒风险的不同影响的艾滋病毒预防项目提供了启示。对吸毒女性进行关于毒品对性行为的影响以及性暴力和艾滋病毒传播风险的教育至关重要。