Cipres Danielle, Rodriguez Amanda, Alvarez Janette, Stern Lisa, Steinauer Jody, Seidman Dominika
University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, California.
Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
J Adolesc Health. 2017 May;60(5):556-562. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2016.11.024. Epub 2017 Feb 1.
Young women of color in the United States are disproportionately affected by sexually transmitted infections (STIs). We characterize the protective behaviors used by young women to reduce their vulnerability to STI acquisition and examine how STI prevention strategies differ by race/ethnicity.
From 2015 to 2016, women aged 13-24 years presenting to five Northern California family planning clinics were surveyed about their STI prevention strategies. The chi-squared tests and multivariable logistic regression identified associations between race/ethnicity and use of sexual health-promoting strategies.
Among 790 women, the most common strategies included condom use (67%), asking partners about STIs (47%), limiting sexual partners (35%), frequent STI screening (35%), and asking partners about other sexual partners (33%). Black, Hispanic, and Asian women had decreased odds of utilizing strategies before intercourse compared with white women (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: .25, confidence interval [.14-.47]; aOR: .36, CI [.20-.65]; aOR: .44, CI [.23-.84]). Black women had decreased odds of using strategies requiring partner involvement (aOR: .35, CI [.13-.92]). White women were more likely to report that providers discussed condoms (aOR: 2.53, CI [1.04-6.15]) and talked to partners about STIs (aOR: 2.56, CI [1.52-4.32]) compared with nonwhite women. Black and Hispanic women were more likely to feel very uncomfortable discussing lifetime sexual partners (aOR: 4.26, CI [1.36-13.30] and aOR: 5.35, CI [1.79-15.99]) and condom use (aOR: 3.05, CI [1.14-8.15] and aOR: 2.86, CI [1.11-7.35]) with providers.
Young women use diverse strategies to prevent STIs that vary by race/ethnicity. Providers can use these findings to improve sexual health counseling and promote equitable education and services.
美国有色人种年轻女性感染性传播感染(STIs)的比例过高。我们描述年轻女性为降低感染STIs易感性而采取的保护行为,并研究按种族/族裔划分的STI预防策略有何不同。
2015年至2016年,对前往北加利福尼亚五家计划生育诊所就诊的13至24岁女性进行了关于其STI预防策略的调查。卡方检验和多变量逻辑回归确定了种族/族裔与促进性健康策略使用之间的关联。
在790名女性中,最常见的策略包括使用避孕套(67%)、询问性伴侣是否感染STIs(47%)、限制性伴侣数量(35%)、定期进行STI筛查(35%)以及询问性伴侣其他性伴侣的情况(33%)。与白人女性相比,黑人、西班牙裔和亚裔女性在性交前采取预防策略的几率较低(调整后的优势比[aOR]:0.25,置信区间[CI][0.14 - 0.47];aOR:0.36,CI[0.20 - 0.65];aOR:0.44,CI[0.23 - 0.84])。黑人女性采取需要性伴侣参与的预防策略的几率较低(aOR:0.35,CI[0.13 - 0.92])。与非白人女性相比,白人女性更有可能报告医护人员讨论过避孕套(aOR:2.53,CI[1.04 - 6.15])以及与性伴侣谈论过STIs(aOR:2.56,CI[1.52 - 4.32])。黑人和西班牙裔女性在与医护人员讨论终身性伴侣数量(aOR:4.26,CI[1.36 - 13.30]和aOR:5.35,CI[1.79 - 15.99])以及避孕套使用情况(aOR:3.05,CI[1.14 - 8.15]和aOR:2.86,CI[1.11 - 7.35])时,感觉非常不舒服的可能性更大。
年轻女性采用多种不同的策略预防STIs,这些策略因种族/族裔而异。医护人员可利用这些研究结果改善性健康咨询,并促进公平的教育和服务。