Parikh Shanti A
Department of Anthropology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63139, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2007 Jul;97(7):1198-208. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2006.088682. Epub 2007 May 30.
Research has shown that married women's greatest risk for HIV infection is their husbands' extramarital sexual activities. Using 6 months of ethnographic research in southeastern Uganda, I examined how the social and economic contexts surrounding men's extramarital sexuality and the dynamics of marriage put men and women at risk for HIV infection. I found that Uganda's HIV prevention messages may be inadvertently contributing to increased difficulty in acknowledging HIV risk and to newer forms of sexual secrecy and that structural determinants, including persistent poverty, intersect with gender inequalities to shape marital risk. After examining a community effort to regulate men's sexuality, I suggest that HIV prevention strategies should focus more on endogenous forms of risk reduction while simultaneously addressing structural factors that facilitate opportunities for men's extramarital sex.
研究表明,已婚女性感染艾滋病毒的最大风险在于其丈夫的婚外性行为。通过对乌干达东南部进行为期6个月的人种学研究,我考察了男性婚外性行为所处的社会经济背景以及婚姻动态如何使男性和女性面临感染艾滋病毒的风险。我发现,乌干达的艾滋病毒预防信息可能在无意中加剧了人们认识艾滋病毒风险的难度,并导致了新形式的性隐秘行为,而且包括长期贫困在内的结构性决定因素与性别不平等相互交织,从而形成了婚姻风险。在考察了一项规范男性性行为的社区努力后,我建议艾滋病毒预防策略应更多地侧重于内生性的风险降低形式,同时应对那些为男性婚外性行为创造机会的结构性因素。