Davidoff-Gore Alena, Luke Nancy, Wawire Salome
Population Studies and Training Center, Brown University, Providence, USA.
AIDS Care. 2011 Oct;23(10):1282-90. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2011.555744. Epub 2011 May 23.
To date, research on the link between poverty and unsafe sexual behaviors has utilized limited measures of socioeconomic status and has overlooked key dimensions of poverty at the individual level. This study explored how various dimensions of socioeconomic status are associated with inconsistent condom use and how these associations vary by gender. We analyzed unique life history survey data from 261 young men and women in Kisumu, Kenya, and conducted analyses based on 959 person-months in which respondents had been sexually active in nonmarital relationships. Dependent variables were inconsistent condom use (not always using a condom) and never use of condoms. Condoms were used inconsistently in 57% of months and were never used in 31%. Corroborating existing literature, lower household wealth and lower educational attainment were associated with inconsistent condom use. Lower individual economic status (lower earned income, food insufficiency, and larger material transfers from partners) were also important determinants of inconsistent condom use. There were no significant differences in these associations by gender, with the exception of food insufficiency, which increased the risk of inconsistent condom use for young women but not for young men. None of these individual measures of socioeconomic status were associated with never use of a condom. The findings suggest that both household- and individual-level measures of socioeconomic status are important correlates of condom use and that individual economic resources play a crucial role in negotiations over the highest level of usage. The results highlight the importance of poverty in shaping sexual behavior, and, in particular, that increasing individual access to resources beyond the household, including ensuring access to food and providing educational and work opportunities, could prove to be effective strategies for decreasing the risk of HIV among youth.
迄今为止,关于贫困与不安全性行为之间联系的研究采用的社会经济地位衡量指标有限,且忽视了个体层面贫困的关键维度。本研究探讨了社会经济地位的各个维度如何与不坚持使用避孕套相关联,以及这些关联如何因性别而异。我们分析了来自肯尼亚基苏木的261名年轻男性和女性的独特生活史调查数据,并基于959个人月进行了分析,在此期间,受访者在非婚姻关系中有性行为。因变量是不坚持使用避孕套(并非总是使用避孕套)和从不使用避孕套。在57%的月份中避孕套使用不规律,31%的月份从未使用过避孕套。与现有文献一致,家庭财富较低和教育程度较低与不坚持使用避孕套有关。个人经济地位较低(收入较低、食物不足以及来自伴侣的物质转移较多)也是不坚持使用避孕套的重要决定因素。除了食物不足外,这些关联在性别上没有显著差异,食物不足增加了年轻女性不坚持使用避孕套的风险,但对年轻男性没有影响。这些社会经济地位的个体衡量指标均与从不使用避孕套无关。研究结果表明,家庭和个人层面的社会经济地位衡量指标都是避孕套使用的重要相关因素,个人经济资源在关于最高使用水平的谈判中起着关键作用。结果凸显了贫困在塑造性行为方面的重要性,特别是增加个人获得家庭以外资源的机会,包括确保获得食物以及提供教育和工作机会,可能是降低青年感染艾滋病毒风险的有效策略。