Marsiglia Flavio Francisco, Nieri Tanya, Stiffman Arlene Rubin
Southwest Interdiciplinary Research Center, Arizona State University School of Social Work, Tempe, USA.
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2006 Nov;17(4):745-58. doi: 10.1353/hpu.2006.0128.
This research examined how family and individual factors influence 3 HIV/AIDS risk behaviors: having more than 1 sexual partner in the last 3 months, substance use at last sexual intercourse, and condom non-use at last sexual intercourse. The sample includes 89 sexually active American Indian adolescents living in a large Southwestern U.S. city. Logistic regression results revealed that family communication acts as a protective factor against HIV risk through a lower reported substance use during last sexual intercourse, but it did not appear to affect the number of multiple recent sex partners. Family and personal involvement in American Indian cultural activities, both low on average in this urban sample, had no effect on outcomes. This study advances knowledge on sexual health risk and protective factors among American Indian adolescents, an understudied group, and provides implications for prevention intervention with American Indian youths and their families.
本研究考察了家庭和个人因素如何影响三种艾滋病毒/艾滋病风险行为:在过去三个月内有多个性伴侣、最近一次性交时使用毒品以及最近一次性交时未使用避孕套。样本包括89名居住在美国西南部一个大城市的性活跃美国印第安青少年。逻辑回归结果显示,家庭沟通通过降低最近一次性交时报告的毒品使用量,起到了预防艾滋病毒风险的保护作用,但似乎并未影响近期多个性伴侣的数量。家庭和个人参与美国印第安文化活动(在这个城市样本中平均参与度较低)对结果没有影响。这项研究增进了对美国印第安青少年(一个研究较少的群体)性健康风险和保护因素的认识,并为针对美国印第安青年及其家庭的预防干预提供了启示。