Larson A
Health Transition Centre, Australian National University, Canberra.
Rev Infect Dis. 1989 Sep-Oct;11(5):716-31. doi: 10.1093/clinids/11.5.716.
The literature relating to the social context of sexual relations in East and Central Africa has several implications for the heterosexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Colonially created cities in the region still discriminate economically and socially against women. Rapid urbanization is occurring, but migrants maintain strong ties with rural areas. Traditional attitudes towards marriage and sexuality affect urban behavior in the extent of marital stability, the frequency of polygyny, and the emotional bond between spouses. Ethnic groups in Kampala and Nairobi exemplify the cultural foundations of two forms of sexual relations found in the region, one characterized by prostitution and the other by small circles of interchanging lovers. The first results in a more rapid spread of HIV through the urban population and outwards into rural areas. Each pattern exerts unique constraints on behavioral change and requires different prevention campaigns.
与东非和中非性关系的社会背景相关的文献对人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的异性传播有若干影响。该地区殖民时期建立的城市在经济和社会方面仍对女性存在歧视。快速城市化正在发生,但移民与农村地区仍保持着紧密联系。对婚姻和性的传统态度在婚姻稳定性、一夫多妻制的频率以及配偶间的情感纽带等方面影响着城市行为。坎帕拉和内罗毕的族群体现了该地区两种性关系形式的文化基础,一种以卖淫为特征,另一种以相互交往的小圈子情人关系为特征。第一种导致HIV在城市人口中更快传播,并向外扩散到农村地区。每种模式对行为改变都有独特的限制,需要不同的预防运动。