Wechsberg Wendee M, Myers Bronwyn, Kline Tracy L, Carney Tara, Browne Felicia A, Novak Scott P
Senior Director, Substance Abuse Treatment and Interventions Research, RTI International, 3040 Cornwallis Road, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA ; Adjunct Professor, Health Policy and Administration, Gillings School of Global Public Health, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA ; Adjunct Professor, Psychology in the Public Interest, North Carolina State University (NCSU), Raleigh, NC, USA ; Adjunct Associate Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
J AIDS Clin Res. 2012 Jul 20;S1(15). doi: 10.4172/2155-6113.S1-015.
Alcohol and other drug (AOD) use remains an important contributing factor to the spread of HIV in South Africa, mainly because of the strong associations found between AOD use and sex risk behaviors. Specifically, AOD use can lead to disinhibition and impaired judgment that may result in inconsistent condom use and other risky sex behaviors among vulnerable and disempowered women. METHODS: Latent Class Analysis was used to identify AOD use typologies among 720 vulnerable women from a randomized trial baseline assessment in Cape Town, South Africa and to examine whether these AOD use classes predict sex risk for HIV. RESULTS: Three classes emerged with distinct differences in AOD use: the Marijuana and Alcohol class (34.6%) mainly comprised participants who used marijuana and drank alcohol frequently; the High AOD Risk class (26.1%) mainly comprised participants who used methamphetamine and marijuana, reported heavy drinking, and moderate probabilities of Mandrax use; and the Polydrug use class (39.3%) predominately comprised participants who used methamphetamine, marijuana, and Mandrax. Participants in the Marijuana and Alcohol class were less likely to report past-month unprotected sex with their main sex partner compared with participants in the Polydrug Use class. When examining the adjusted model, Black African women were significantly less likely to report past-month unprotected sex with their main sex partner compared with Coloured women. Women who were HIV negative were more likely to report unprotected sex with their main sex partner than women who were HIV positive. CONCLUSION: The fewer substances that women used seemed to serve as protective factors against engaging in AOD-impaired sex. This study provides an important contribution to understand the intersection of AOD use and sexual risk for HIV by measuring polydrug use among vulnerable women and its association with sexual risk taking.
在南非,酒精及其他药物(AOD)的使用仍是导致艾滋病毒传播的一个重要因素,主要是因为AOD使用与性风险行为之间存在密切关联。具体而言,AOD使用会导致行为抑制解除和判断力受损,这可能致使弱势和无权女性出现不坚持使用避孕套及其他危险性行为。
采用潜在类别分析来确定南非开普敦一项随机试验基线评估中720名弱势女性的AOD使用类型,并检验这些AOD使用类别是否能预测艾滋病毒的性风险。
出现了三类在AOD使用方面有明显差异的情况:大麻与酒精类(34.6%)主要由经常使用大麻和饮酒的参与者组成;高AOD风险类(26.1%)主要由使用甲基苯丙胺和大麻、报告大量饮酒且有一定概率使用马吲哚的参与者组成;多药使用类(39.3%)主要由使用甲基苯丙胺、大麻和马吲哚的参与者组成。与多药使用类的参与者相比,大麻与酒精类的参与者报告过去一个月与主要性伴侣发生无保护性行为的可能性较小。在检验调整模型时,与有色人种女性相比,非洲黑人女性报告过去一个月与主要性伴侣发生无保护性行为的可能性显著较低。艾滋病毒阴性的女性比艾滋病毒阳性的女性更有可能报告与主要性伴侣发生无保护性行为。
女性使用的物质越少,似乎越能起到保护作用,防止她们在受AOD影响的情况下发生性行为。本研究通过测量弱势女性中的多药使用情况及其与性冒险行为的关联,为理解AOD使用与艾滋病毒性风险的交叉关系做出了重要贡献。