Center for Health and Behavior, Syracuse University, New York 13244-2340, USA.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2009 Sep;70(5):762-70. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2009.70.762.
Research on the association between substance use and sexual risk behavior has yielded a complex pattern of findings. Such inconsistent findings may reflect method variance, including factors such as gender of the participant, nature of the sexual event, partner characteristics, and type of substance used. The purpose of this study was to investigate the association between substance use and unprotected sex independently for alcohol, drugs, or combined substance use and to examine partner characteristics as a moderator of this association.
Participants (N = 1,419; 48% women) were recruited from a publicly funded sexually transmitted disease clinic and were asked to complete an audio computer-assisted self-interview regarding their most recent sexual experience, including nature of the event, substance use, and partner characteristics.
Analyses showed that alcohol use was related to condom use when gender and partner type were considered; thus, for women, but not for men, partner type interacted with alcohol consumption such that condom use was less likely when alcohol consumption preceded sex with nonprimary partners (drinking was unrelated to condom use with primary partners). Subsequent analyses examining partner substance use showed that women, but not men, who reported both they and their nonprimary partners were drinking during sex were less likely to use a condom.
At the event level, alcohol consumption among sexually transmitted disease clinic patients is associated with condom use, but this association differs by gender and partner characteristics. Findings suggest the need to strengthen substance-use components in sexual risk reduction interventions for women and their partners.
对物质使用与性风险行为之间的关联进行研究,得出了复杂的发现模式。这些不一致的发现可能反映了方法上的差异,包括参与者的性别、性事件的性质、伴侣特征以及所使用物质的类型等因素。本研究旨在调查物质使用与未采取保护措施的性行为之间的关联,分别针对酒精、毒品或两者同时使用进行调查,并检验伴侣特征是否是这种关联的调节因素。
参与者(N=1419;48%为女性)从一家公共资助的性传播疾病诊所招募,要求他们完成关于最近一次性经历的音频计算机辅助自我访谈,包括事件性质、物质使用和伴侣特征。
分析表明,在考虑性别和伴侣类型的情况下,酒精使用与使用避孕套有关;因此,对于女性而言,而不是男性,伴侣类型与酒精摄入相互作用,使得与非主要伴侣发生性行为时使用避孕套的可能性降低(与主要伴侣发生性行为时,饮酒与使用避孕套无关)。随后对伴侣物质使用进行的分析表明,报告自己和非主要伴侣在性行为中都饮酒的女性使用避孕套的可能性较低,而男性则不然。
在事件层面上,性传播疾病诊所患者的酒精消费与使用避孕套有关,但这种关联因性别和伴侣特征而异。研究结果表明,需要加强针对女性及其伴侣的性风险降低干预措施中的物质使用部分。