YR Gaitonde Centre for AIDS Research and Education, Chennai, India.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2010 Jun 23;13 Suppl 2(Suppl 2):S7. doi: 10.1186/1758-2652-13-S2-S7.
HIV/AIDS in India disproportionately affects women, not by their own risks, but by those of their partners, generally their spouses. We address two marginalized populations at elevated risk of acquiring HIV: women who are married to men who also have sex with men (MSM) and wives of injection drug users (IDUs).
We used a combination of focus groups (qualitative) and structured surveys (quantitative) to identify the risks that high-risk men pose to their low-risk wives and/or sexual partners. Married MSM were identified using respondent-driven recruitment in Tamil Nadu, India, and were interviewed by trainer assessors. A sample of wives of injection drug users in Chennai were recruited from men enrolled in a cohort study of the epidemiology of drug use among IDUs in Chennai, and completed a face-to-face survey. Focus groups were held with all groups of study participants, and the outcomes transcribed and analyzed for major themes on family, HIV and issues related to stigma, discrimination and disclosure.
Using mixed-methods research, married MSM are shown to not disclose their sexual practices to their wives, whether due to internalized homophobia, fear of stigma and discrimination, personal embarrassment or changing sexual mores. Married MSM in India largely follow the prevailing norm of marriage to the opposite sex and having a child to satisfy social pressures. Male IDUs cannot hide their drug use as easily as married MSM, but they also avoid disclosure. The majority of their wives learn of their drug-using behaviour only after they are married, making them generally helpless to protect themselves. Fear of poverty and negative influences on children were the major impacts associated with continuing drug use.
We propose a research and prevention agenda to address the HIV risks encountered by families of high-risk men in the Indian and other low- and middle-income country contexts.
在印度,艾滋病毒/艾滋病的感染率在女性中不成比例,这并不是因为她们自身的风险,而是因为她们的伴侣(通常是丈夫)存在风险。我们关注的是两个处于艾滋病毒高感染风险的边缘化群体:与男男性行为者(MSM)结婚的女性和注射吸毒者(IDU)的妻子。
我们结合使用焦点小组(定性)和结构调查(定量),以确定高风险男性对低风险妻子和/或性伴侣构成的风险。在印度泰米尔纳德邦,我们使用受访者驱动招募(RDD)识别出已婚 MSM,并由培训评估员对其进行访谈。在金奈,我们从参加金奈 IDU 药物使用流行病学队列研究的男性中招募了一批 IDU 妻子,并对其进行了面对面调查。对所有研究参与者进行了焦点小组讨论,对家庭、艾滋病毒以及与耻辱、歧视和披露相关的问题的主要主题进行了转录和分析。
使用混合方法研究,已婚 MSM 并未向其妻子透露他们的性行为,这可能是由于内心的恐同、对耻辱和歧视的恐惧、个人尴尬或性观念的变化。印度的已婚 MSM 大多遵循与异性结婚并生育子女以满足社会压力的普遍规范。男性 IDU 不能像已婚 MSM 那样轻易隐瞒他们的吸毒行为,但他们也避免透露。他们的大多数妻子在婚后才得知他们的吸毒行为,这使她们在保护自己方面无能为力。对贫困的恐惧和对孩子的负面影响是与继续吸毒相关的主要影响。
我们提出了一个研究和预防议程,以解决印度和其他低收入和中等收入国家背景下高危男性家庭面临的艾滋病毒风险。