Jennings Larissa, Mathai Muthoni, Linnemayr Sebastian, Trujillo Antonio, Mak'anyengo Margaret, Montgomery Brooke E E, Kerrigan Deanna L
Social and Behavioral Interventions Program, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Room E5038, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, College of Health Sciences, Kenyatta National Hospital, University of Nairobi, Off-Ngong Road, Nairobi, Kenya.
AIDS Behav. 2017 Sep;21(9):2784-2798. doi: 10.1007/s10461-017-1676-y.
Urban slum adolescents and young adults have disproportionately high rates of HIV compared to rural and non-slum urban youth. Yet, few studies have examined youth's perceptions of the economic drivers of HIV. Informed by traditional and behavioral economics, we applied a scarcity theoretical framework to qualitatively examine how poverty influences sexual risk behaviors among adolescents and young adults. Focus group discussions with one hundred twenty youth in Kenyan's urban slums were transcribed, coded, and analyzed using interpretive phenomenology. Results indicated that slum youth made many sexual decisions considered rational from a traditional economics perspective, such as acquiring more sex when resources were available, maximizing wealth through sex, being price-sensitive to costs of condoms or testing services, and taking more risks when protected from adverse sexual consequences. Youth's engagement in sexual risk behaviors was also motivated by scarcity phenomena explained by behavioral economics, such as compensating for sex lost during scarce periods (risk-seeking), valuing economic gains over HIV risks (tunneling, bandwidth tax), and transacting sex as an investment strategy (internal referencing). When scarcity was alleviated, young women additionally described reducing the number of sex partners to account for non-economic preferences (slack). Prevention strategies should address the traditional and behavioral economics of the HIV epidemic.
与农村和非贫民窟城市青年相比,城市贫民窟青少年和青年成年人的艾滋病毒感染率高得不成比例。然而,很少有研究考察青年对艾滋病毒经济驱动因素的看法。基于传统经济学和行为经济学,我们应用了一个稀缺理论框架,以定性方式研究贫困如何影响青少年和青年成年人的性风险行为。对肯尼亚城市贫民窟的120名青年进行焦点小组讨论,并对讨论内容进行转录、编码,然后采用解释现象学进行分析。结果表明,从传统经济学角度来看,贫民窟青年做出了许多被认为是理性的性决策,比如在有资源时进行更多性行为、通过性行为实现财富最大化、对避孕套或检测服务的成本对价格敏感,以及在免受不良性后果影响时承担更多风险。青年参与性风险行为还受到行为经济学所解释的稀缺现象的驱动,比如补偿在稀缺时期失去的性行为(冒险寻求)、将经济收益置于艾滋病毒风险之上(隧道视野、带宽税),以及将性行为作为一种投资策略进行交易(内部参照)。当稀缺状况得到缓解时,年轻女性还描述了减少性伴侣数量以考虑非经济偏好(松弛)。预防策略应应对艾滋病毒流行的传统经济学和行为经济学因素。