Yale Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS and Yale Law School, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2013 Oct;94:115-23. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.03.020. Epub 2013 Mar 27.
The growing evidence base for biomedical HIV prevention interventions - such as oral pre-exposure prophylaxis, microbicides, male circumcision, treatment as prevention, and eventually prevention vaccines - has given rise to concerns about the ways in which users of these biomedical products may adjust their HIV risk behaviors based on the perception that they are prevented from infection. Known as risk compensation, this behavioral adjustment draws on the theory of "risk homeostasis," which has previously been applied to phenomena as diverse as Lyme disease vaccination, insurance mandates, and automobile safety. Little rigorous evidence exists to answer risk compensation concerns in the biomedical HIV prevention literature, in part because the field has not systematically evaluated the study designs available for testing these behaviors. The goals of this Commentary are to explain the origins of risk compensation behavior in risk homeostasis theory, to reframe risk compensation as a testable response to the perception of reduced risk, and to assess the methodological rigor and ethical justification of study designs aiming to isolate risk compensation responses. Although the most rigorous methodological designs for assessing risk compensation behavior may be unavailable due to ethical flaws, several strategies can help investigators identify potential risk compensation behavior during Phase II, Phase III, and Phase IV testing of new technologies. Where concerns arise regarding risk compensation behavior, empirical evidence about the incidence, types, and extent of these behavioral changes can illuminate opportunities to better support the users of new HIV prevention strategies. This Commentary concludes by suggesting a new way to conceptualize risk compensation behavior in the HIV prevention context.
越来越多的生物医学 HIV 预防干预措施的证据基础 - 如口服暴露前预防、杀微生物剂、男性包皮环切术、治疗即预防,以及最终的预防疫苗 - 引起了人们对这些生物医学产品的使用者可能根据他们认为自己免受感染的感知来调整 HIV 风险行为的方式的担忧。这种行为调整被称为风险补偿,它基于“风险平衡”理论,该理论以前曾应用于莱姆病疫苗接种、保险要求和汽车安全等各种现象。在生物医学 HIV 预防文献中,几乎没有严格的证据来回答风险补偿问题,部分原因是该领域尚未系统评估可用于测试这些行为的研究设计。本评论的目的是解释风险补偿行为在风险平衡理论中的起源,将风险补偿重新定义为对降低风险感知的可测试反应,并评估旨在隔离风险补偿反应的研究设计的方法严谨性和伦理合理性。尽管由于伦理缺陷,评估风险补偿行为的最严格的方法设计可能无法使用,但有几种策略可以帮助研究人员在新技术的 II 期、III 期和 IV 期测试中识别潜在的风险补偿行为。在对风险补偿行为表示关注的情况下,有关这些行为变化的发生率、类型和程度的经验证据可以阐明有机会更好地支持新 HIV 预防策略的使用者。本评论最后提出了一种在 HIV 预防背景下重新概念化风险补偿行为的新方法。