Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC.
Emerging Pathogens Institute, and.
Sex Transm Dis. 2018 Sep;45(9):626-631. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000000861.
Despite evidence that education and poverty act through distinct pathways to influence sexually transmitted infection (STI), few studies have examined the unique, independent associations of these socioeconomic vulnerabilities with sexual risk behaviors and STI among women.
From August to October 2013, women at an antenatal clinic in Gressier, Haiti, were interviewed and tested for chlamydial infection, gonorrhea, and trichomoniasis (N = 200). We measured low educational attainment as less than 9 years of schooling and currently living in poverty based on crowding, defined as more than 2 people sleeping in one room. We used logistic regression to estimate independent associations between each socioeconomic indicator and outcomes of sexual behaviors and STI.
Approximately 29% of the sample had a current STI (chlamydia, 8.0%; gonorrhea, 3.0%; trichomoniasis, 20.5%), with 2.5% testing positive for more than 1 STI. Forty percent of the sample reported low educational attainment and 40% reported current poverty. Low educational attainment was associated with early risk behaviors, including twice the odds of earlier sexual debut (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 2.09; 95% confidence interval [CI],: 1.14-3.84). Poverty was associated with reporting the current main sexual partner to be nonmonogamous (AOR, 2.01; 95% CI, 1.00-4.01) and current STI (AOR, 2.50; 95% CI, 1.26-4.98).
Education and poverty seem to independently influence STI behaviors and infection, with low education associated with early sexual risk and poverty associated with current risk and infection. Improving women's educational attainment may be important in improving risk awareness, thereby reducing risky sexual behaviors and preventing a trajectory of STI risk.
尽管有证据表明教育和贫困通过不同途径影响性传播感染(STI),但很少有研究调查这些社会经济脆弱性与女性性风险行为和 STI 之间的独特、独立关联。
2013 年 8 月至 10 月,在海地格雷西埃尔的一家产前诊所,对 200 名妇女进行了访谈和衣原体感染、淋病和滴虫病检测。我们将受教育程度低定义为少于 9 年的学校教育,目前生活贫困,根据拥挤程度来定义,即超过 2 人睡在一个房间。我们使用逻辑回归来估计每个社会经济指标与性行为和 STI 结局之间的独立关联。
样本中约有 29%的人患有当前的 STI(衣原体 8.0%;淋病 3.0%;滴虫病 20.5%),2.5%的人检测出超过 1 种 STI 呈阳性。样本中 40%的人受教育程度低,40%的人报告目前贫困。受教育程度低与早期风险行为有关,包括性初夜提前的几率增加两倍(调整后的优势比 [AOR],2.09;95%置信区间 [CI]:1.14-3.84)。贫困与报告当前主要性伴侣为非单偶(AOR,2.01;95% CI,1.00-4.01)和当前 STI(AOR,2.50;95% CI,1.26-4.98)有关。
教育和贫困似乎独立地影响 STI 行为和感染,受教育程度低与早期性风险有关,而贫困与当前风险和感染有关。提高妇女的教育水平可能对提高风险意识很重要,从而减少危险的性行为并防止 STI 风险的轨迹。