Département de médecine sociale et préventive, Université Laval, Québec, Canada.
Cult Health Sex. 2012;14(6):629-44. doi: 10.1080/13691058.2012.674559. Epub 2012 May 11.
In South India, where the majority of the country's cases of HIV are concentrated, transmission of infection occurs mainly within networks composed of female sex workers, their clients and the other sexual partners of the latter. This study aims to determine how gender relations affect the risks of HIV transmission in this region. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 30 clients and analysed qualitatively. Results show that clients perceive sexual relations with female sex workers as a vice involving loss of control and contact with women at the bottom of the social ladder. Paradoxically, this sometimes allows them to conform to the masculine ideal, in giving sexual satisfaction to a woman, in a context of incompatibility between the idealised and actual masculine and feminine archetypes. Attitudes to condoms, affected by various facets of the client-female sex worker relationship, are indicators of the link between this relationship and the risks of contracting HIV. The results suggest that there is a need for expanding targeted HIV prevention towards clients and female sex workers alongside more general interventions on gender issues, particularly among young people, focusing on the structural elements moulding current relations between men and women, with particular consideration of local cultural characteristics.
在印度南部,该国大多数艾滋病病毒感染病例集中于此,感染的传播主要发生在由性工作者、她们的客户以及后者的其他性伴侣组成的网络内。本研究旨在确定在该地区,性别关系如何影响艾滋病毒传播的风险。对 30 名客户进行了半结构化访谈,并进行了定性分析。结果表明,客户认为与性工作者的性关系是一种恶习,涉及失去控制和与社会底层的女性接触。矛盾的是,这有时使他们能够在不兼容的理想化和实际的男性和女性原型的情况下,通过给予女性性满足来符合男性理想。对避孕套的态度受到客户-性工作者关系的各个方面的影响,是这种关系与感染艾滋病毒风险之间联系的指标。研究结果表明,需要针对客户和性工作者扩大有针对性的艾滋病毒预防措施,同时开展关于性别问题的更广泛的干预措施,特别是在年轻人中,重点是塑造当前男女关系的结构要素,特别要考虑当地的文化特点。