Jolly David H, Mueller Monique P, Chen Mario, Alston Le'Marus, Hawley Marcus, Okumu Eunice, Eley Natalie T, Stancil Tonya, MacQueen Kathleen M
North Carolina Central University, Durham, North Carolina.
FHI 360, Durham, North Carolina.
AIDS Educ Prev. 2016 Feb;28(1):59-76. doi: 10.1521/aeap.2016.28.1.59.
Black Americans continue to have higher rates of HIV disease than other races/ethnicities. Conventional individual-level risk behaviors do not fully account for these racial/ethnic disparities. Sexual concurrency may help explain them. Respondent-driven sampling (RDS) was used to enroll 508 sexually active 18- to 30-year-old Black men and women in Durham, North Carolina in a cross-sectional survey on HIV-related topics. Consistent condom use was low for all participants, especially with steady partners. Concurrent partnerships in the past 6 months were relatively common for both men (38%) and women (25%). In general, men involved in concurrent relationships engaged in more risk behaviors than other men (e.g., inconsistent condom use and alcohol and drug use). A majority of concurrent partnerships involved steady partners. HIV-prevention programs should address the risks of concurrency and factors that discourage condom use, especially with steady partners with whom condom use is particularly low.
美国黑人感染艾滋病毒的比例仍然高于其他种族/族裔。传统的个人层面风险行为并不能完全解释这些种族/族裔差异。性伴侣重叠可能有助于解释这些差异。在北卡罗来纳州达勒姆市进行的一项关于艾滋病毒相关主题的横断面调查中,采用应答者驱动抽样(RDS)方法招募了508名18至30岁性活跃的黑人男性和女性。所有参与者的避孕套持续使用率都很低,尤其是与固定伴侣使用避孕套的情况。在过去6个月中,性伴侣重叠情况在男性(38%)和女性(25%)中都相对常见。总体而言,有重叠性伴侣关系的男性比其他男性有更多的风险行为(例如,避孕套使用不规范以及酗酒和吸毒)。大多数重叠性伴侣关系涉及固定伴侣。艾滋病毒预防项目应解决性伴侣重叠的风险以及阻碍使用避孕套的因素,尤其是与避孕套使用率特别低的固定伴侣相关的因素。