Warren Jocelyn T, Harvey S Marie, Washburn Isaac Joel, Sanchez Diana Maria, Schoenbach Victor J, Agnew Christopher R
From the *Lane County Health and Human Services, Eugene; †Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR; ‡Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK; §UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC; and ¶Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN.
Sex Transm Dis. 2015 Apr;42(4):180-4. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000000252.
The impact of concurrency on sexually transmitted infection transmission depends on coital frequency, condom use, duration of relationship overlap, and number of partners. Previous research has identified distinct concurrency types; however, little is known about their risk characteristics.
Men (n = 261) and women (n = 275) aged 18 to 30 years at increased risk for acquiring HIV were recruited from community locations in Los Angeles. Participants completed 4 in-person interviews for 12 months. Partnership data were used to characterize the prevalence of 4 types of concurrency: transitional (2 overlapping relationships in which the first relationship ended before the second), single day (a second relationship of 1 day's duration during the course of another relationship), contained (a second relationship >1 day began and ended during the course of another), and multiple (≥3 overlapping relationships). Multilevel random intercept models were used to estimate mean coital frequency, proportion of condom-protected acts, total duration of overlap, and lifetime sex partners.
At baseline, 47% of male and 32% of female participants reported any type of concurrency in the previous 4 months, and 26% of men and 10% of women reported multiple concurrencies. Condom use ranged from 56% to 64%, with the highest use in transitional concurrency (61% for men, 68% for women) and the lowest in contained (52% for men, 54% for women). Coital frequency, total overlap, and lifetime sex partners also varied by concurrency type.
Inconsistent condom use and repeated opportunities for exposure characterize common types of concurrency among high-risk young adults.
性伴重叠对性传播感染传播的影响取决于性交频率、避孕套使用情况、关系重叠的持续时间以及性伴侣数量。先前的研究已确定了不同的性伴重叠类型;然而,对其风险特征知之甚少。
从洛杉矶的社区场所招募了年龄在18至30岁、感染HIV风险增加的男性(n = 261)和女性(n = 275)。参与者在12个月内完成了4次面对面访谈。性伴侣关系数据用于描述4种性伴重叠类型的流行情况:过渡型(两段重叠关系,第一段关系在第二段关系开始前结束)、单日型(在另一段关系期间持续1天的第二段关系)、包含型(在另一段关系期间开始并结束且持续时间>1天的第二段关系)和多重型(≥3段重叠关系)。采用多水平随机截距模型来估计平均性交频率、避孕套保护性行为的比例、重叠的总持续时间以及终身性伴侣数量。
在基线时,47%的男性和32%的女性参与者报告在过去4个月内有任何类型的性伴重叠,26%的男性和10%的女性报告有多重性伴重叠。避孕套使用率在56%至64%之间,其中过渡型性伴重叠的使用率最高(男性为61%,女性为68%),包含型最低(男性为52%,女性为54%)。性交频率、总重叠时间和终身性伴侣数量也因性伴重叠类型而异。
避孕套使用不一致以及反复的暴露机会是高危年轻成年人中性伴重叠常见类型的特征。