Portland State University, Portland, OR 97202, USA.
Qual Health Res. 2013 Sep;23(9):1240-50. doi: 10.1177/1049732313502129. Epub 2013 Aug 7.
We examined structural factors-social, political, economic, and environmental-that increase vulnerability to HIV among indigenous people in the Peruvian Amazon. Indigenous adults belonging to 12 different ethnic groups were purposively recruited in four Amazonian river ports and 16 indigenous villages. Qualitative data revealed a complex set of structural factors that give rise to environments of risk where health is constantly challenged. Ferryboats that cross Amazonian rivers are settings where unprotected sex-including transactional sex between passengers and boat crew and commercial sex work-often take place. Population mobility and mixing also occurs in settings like the river docks, mining sites, and other resource extraction camps, where heavy drinking and unprotected sex work are common. Multilevel, combination prevention strategies that integrate empirically based interventions with indigenous knowledge are urgently needed, not only to reduce vulnerability to HIV transmission, but also to eliminate the structural determinants of indigenous people's health.
我们研究了增加秘鲁亚马逊地区土著人感染艾滋病毒脆弱性的社会、政治、经济和环境结构因素。在四个亚马逊河港口和 16 个土著村庄,我们有目的地招募了属于 12 个不同民族的成年土著人。定性数据揭示了一系列复杂的结构因素,这些因素导致了健康不断受到挑战的风险环境。横跨亚马逊河的渡轮是无保护性行为发生的场所,包括乘客和船员之间的交易性性行为和商业性性行为。人口流动和混合也发生在河码头、采矿场和其他资源开采营地等场所,这些场所饮酒和无保护性行为很常见。急需采取多层次、综合的预防策略,将基于经验的干预措施与土著知识相结合,不仅要减少艾滋病毒传播的脆弱性,还要消除土著人民健康的结构性决定因素。