University of California at San Francisco, USA.
Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kenya.
Soc Sci Med. 2014 Feb;102:146-56. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.11.004. Epub 2013 Nov 15.
Migration and HIV research in sub-Saharan Africa has focused on HIV risks to male migrants, yet women's levels of participation in internal migration have met or exceeded those of men in the region. Moreover, studies that have examined HIV risks to female migrants found higher risk behavior and HIV prevalence among migrant compared to non-migrant women. However, little is known about the pathways through which participation in migration leads to higher risk behavior in women. This study aimed to characterize the contexts and processes that may facilitate HIV acquisition and transmission among migrant women in the Kisumu area of Nyanza Province, Kenya. We used qualitative methods, including 6 months of participant observation in women's common migration destinations and in-depth semi-structured interviews conducted with 15 male and 40 female migrants selected from these destinations. Gendered aspects of the migration process may be linked to the high risks of HIV observed in female migrants - in the circumstances that trigger migration, livelihood strategies available to female migrants, and social features of migration destinations. Migrations were often precipitated by household shocks due to changes in marital status (as when widowhood resulted in disinheritance) and gender-based violence. Many migrants engaged in transactional sex, of varying regularity, from clandestine to overt, to supplement earnings from informal sector trading. Migrant women are at high risk of HIV transmission and acquisition: the circumstances that drove migration may have also increased HIV infection risk at origin; and social contexts in destinations facilitate having multiple sexual partners and engaging in transactional sex. We propose a model for understanding the pathways through which migration contributes to HIV risks in women in high HIV prevalence areas in Africa, highlighting potential opportunities for primary and secondary HIV prevention at origins and destinations, and at key 'moments of vulnerability' in the migration process.
撒哈拉以南非洲的移民和艾滋病毒研究主要关注男性移民的艾滋病毒风险,但该地区女性参与国内移民的程度已经达到或超过了男性。此外,研究发现,与非移民女性相比,女性移民的艾滋病毒风险更高,行为风险更高,艾滋病毒感染率也更高。然而,人们对女性参与移民如何导致更高的行为风险知之甚少。本研究旨在描述可能促进肯尼亚尼扬扎省基苏木地区移民妇女获得和传播艾滋病毒的背景和过程。我们使用定性方法,包括在女性常见的移民目的地进行了 6 个月的参与性观察,并从这些目的地中选择了 15 名男性和 40 名女性移民进行深入的半结构式访谈。移民过程中的性别方面可能与女性移民中观察到的高艾滋病毒风险有关 - 在引发移民的情况下,女性移民可获得的生计策略,以及移民目的地的社会特征。移民往往是由于婚姻状况的变化(例如丧偶导致被剥夺继承权)和性别暴力引起的家庭冲击而引发的。许多移民从事不同频率的性交易,从秘密到公开,以补充从非正式部门贸易中获得的收入。移民妇女感染艾滋病毒的风险很高:推动移民的情况也可能增加原籍地的艾滋病毒感染风险;目的地的社会背景有利于拥有多个性伴侣和从事性交易。我们提出了一个理解移民如何导致高艾滋病毒流行地区妇女感染艾滋病毒风险的模型,强调了在原籍地和目的地以及移民过程中的关键“脆弱时刻”进行初级和二级艾滋病毒预防的潜在机会。