Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, 458 Nesbitt Hall, 3215 Market St, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2018 Aug;5(4):798-807. doi: 10.1007/s40615-017-0425-2. Epub 2017 Aug 24.
Migration is a structural factor that increases HIV vulnerability. Acculturative stress represents a possible mechanism through which migration may negatively impact HIV risk. This study investigated socio-ecological factors associated with acculturative stress levels and examined the association between acculturative stress and HIV-related behavior among Mexican im/migrants.
We used data from a probability survey of Mexican im/migrants (N = 1383) conducted in Tijuana, Mexico, in 2009-2010. The sample included migrants returning to Mexico via deportation or voluntarily after a recent stay in the USA. Linear regression models were estimated to identify individual, migration, and contextual factors independently associated with overall acculturative stress levels. Logistic regression models were used to test for associations between acculturative stress, sexual HIV risk, and HIV testing history behavior.
We found that levels of acculturative stress were significantly and independently related to socio-economic markers, acculturation level, legal residence status, and sexual minority status. The analyses also showed that acculturative stress was positively related to sexual HIV risk behavior and negatively related to recent HIV testing.
The results underscore that both individual and environmental factors contribute to levels of acculturative stress among Mexican im/migrants. In turn, acculturative stress may exacerbate sexual HIV risk and impede testing among this im/migrant population. Targeted interventions to prevent and decrease acculturative stress represent a potential strategy to reduce sexual HIV risk behavior and promote HIV testing among this vulnerable population of im/migrants in the USA.
迁移是增加 HIV 易感性的结构因素。文化适应压力代表了一种可能的机制,通过这种机制,迁移可能会对 HIV 风险产生负面影响。本研究调查了与文化适应压力水平相关的社会生态学因素,并研究了文化适应压力与墨西哥移民/难民的 HIV 相关行为之间的关系。
我们使用了 2009-2010 年在墨西哥提华纳进行的墨西哥移民/难民概率调查的数据(N=1383)。该样本包括因被驱逐或自愿返回墨西哥的最近留美后移民。线性回归模型用于确定与整体文化适应压力水平独立相关的个体、迁移和环境因素。逻辑回归模型用于检验文化适应压力、性 HIV 风险和 HIV 检测史行为之间的关联。
我们发现,文化适应压力水平与社会经济指标、文化适应水平、合法居住身份和性少数群体身份显著且独立相关。分析还表明,文化适应压力与性 HIV 风险行为呈正相关,与最近的 HIV 检测呈负相关。
结果强调了个体和环境因素都会导致墨西哥移民/难民的文化适应压力水平。反过来,文化适应压力可能会加剧性 HIV 风险,并阻碍该移民群体的检测。针对文化适应压力的预防和减少干预措施代表了减少性 HIV 风险行为和促进该脆弱移民群体在美国进行 HIV 检测的潜在策略。