Fielding-Miller Rebecca, Dunkle Kristin L, Hadley Craig, Cooper Hannah Lf, Windle Michael
Division of Global Public Health, Center on Gender Equity and Health, University of California, San Diego, CA, USA.
Gender and Health Division, South African Medical Research Council, Pretoria, South Africa.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2017 Jul 18;20(1):21554. doi: 10.7448/IAS.20.1.21554.
Transactional sex is a structural driver of HIV for women and girls in sub-Saharan Africa. In transactional relationships, sexual and economic obligations intertwine and may have positive and negative effects on women's financial standing and social status. We conducted a clinic-based survey with pregnant women in Swaziland using a locally validated transactional sex scale to measure the association between subjective social status, transactional sex, and HIV status, and to assess whether this association differed according to a woman's agency within her relationship.
We recruited a convenience sample of 406 pregnant women at one rural and one urban public antenatal clinic in Swaziland and administered a behavioural survey that was linked to participant HIV status using clinic records. We then conducted a multigroup path analysis to test three hypotheses: (1) that more engagement in transactional sex is associated with decreased condom use and increased subjective social status; (2) that subjective social status mediates the relationship between transactional sex and HIV status; and (3) that these relationships are different across groups according to whether or not a woman reported any indicator of constrained agency within her relationship.
The amount and value of material goods received from a sexual partner was significantly and positively associated with higher subjective social status among all participants. As the amount of material goods received from a partner increased, women who reported no indicators of constrained agency were less likely to use condoms. Conversely, there was no relationship between transactional sex and condom use among women who reported any indicator of constrained relationship agency. Among women who reported any indicator of constrained agency, HIV was significantly associated with lower subjective social status.
Relationship agency likely plays a key role in determining which mechanisms create HIV risk for women in transactional relationships. Interventions to mitigate these risks must address social forces that penalize women who engage in sexual relationships as well as structural drivers of gendered economic disparity that reduce women's agency within their sexual and romantic relationships.
在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,性交易是女性和女童感染艾滋病毒的一个结构性驱动因素。在性交易关系中,性义务和经济义务相互交织,可能对女性的经济状况和社会地位产生积极和消极影响。我们在斯威士兰对孕妇进行了一项基于诊所的调查,使用当地验证的性交易量表来衡量主观社会地位、性交易与艾滋病毒感染状况之间的关联,并评估这种关联是否因女性在其关系中的自主性而有所不同。
我们在斯威士兰的一家农村和一家城市公共产前诊所招募了406名孕妇作为便利样本,并进行了一项行为调查,该调查通过诊所记录与参与者的艾滋病毒感染状况相关联。然后,我们进行了多组路径分析,以检验三个假设:(1)更多地参与性交易与减少避孕套使用和提高主观社会地位相关;(2)主观社会地位介导性交易与艾滋病毒感染状况之间的关系;(3)根据女性在其关系中是否报告有任何自主性受限的指标,这些关系在不同群体中有所不同。
在所有参与者中,从性伴侣那里收到的物质商品的数量和价值与较高的主观社会地位显著正相关。随着从伴侣那里收到的物质商品数量增加,报告没有自主性受限指标的女性使用避孕套的可能性降低。相反,在报告有任何关系自主性受限指标的女性中,性交易与避孕套使用之间没有关系。在报告有任何自主性受限指标的女性中,艾滋病毒与较低的主观社会地位显著相关。
关系自主性可能在确定哪些机制会给性交易关系中的女性带来艾滋病毒风险方面发挥关键作用。减轻这些风险的干预措施必须解决惩罚参与性关系的女性的社会力量,以及减少女性在其性和浪漫关系中的自主性的性别经济差距的结构性驱动因素。