Center for AIDS Research, University of Washington, Box 359931, 325 9th Avenue, Seattle, WA, 98104, USA.
University of Alabama-Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2018 Dec;33(12):2163-2170. doi: 10.1007/s11606-018-4675-4. Epub 2018 Sep 24.
Rates of sexually transmitted infection (STI) are rising in the USA, yet STI risk remains under-addressed by providers, even in HIV care, and with high-risk patients. We interviewed primary care patients living with and without HIV regarding circumstances surrounding sexual risk behavior to identify opportunities for providers to address and reduce STI risk.
We conducted semi-structured 1:1 interviews with patients living with and without HIV reporting ≥ 1 sex partner and varying STI exposure risk in the past 12 months from four geographically diverse US HIV and primary care clinics. We audio-recorded, transcribed, and coded interviews by circumstance type, using double-coding to ensure inter-coder reliability. We used Fisher's exact and T tests to determine associations with demographic/risk factors.
Patients (n = 91) identified a mean of 3 of 11 circumstances. These included substance use (54%), desire for physical/emotional intimacy (48%), lack of HIV/STI status disclosure (44%), psychological drivers (i.e., coping, depression; 38%), personal dislike of condoms (22%), partner condom dislike/refusal (19%), receiving payment for sex (13%), and condom unavailability (9%). Higher proportions of those who were high STI-exposure risk patients, defined as those with ≥ 2 sex partners in the past 3 months reporting never or sometimes using condoms, reported disliking condoms (p = .006); higher proportions of the high-risk and moderate-risk (≥ 2 partners and condom use "most of the time") groups reported substance use as a circumstance (p = .04).
Circumstances surrounding perceived STI exposure risk were diverse, often overlapping, and dependent on internal, environmental, and partner-related factors and inadequate communication. Meaningful care-based interventions regarding HIV/STI transmission behavior must address the diversity and interplay of these factors.
美国的性传播感染(STI)发病率正在上升,但即使在艾滋病毒护理中,提供者也未能充分解决性风险,高危患者更是如此。我们采访了艾滋病毒感染者和未感染者的初级保健患者,了解他们性行为风险的相关情况,以确定提供者解决和降低 STI 风险的机会。
我们对来自美国四个地理位置不同的艾滋病毒和初级保健诊所的报告过去 12 个月内有 ≥1 个性伴侣且存在不同 STI 暴露风险的 HIV 感染者和未感染者进行了半结构式 1:1 访谈。我们根据情况类型对访谈进行录音、转录和编码,并使用双编码以确保编码者之间的可靠性。我们使用 Fisher 精确检验和 T 检验来确定与人口统计学/风险因素的关联。
患者(n=91)平均识别了 11 种情况中的 3 种。这些情况包括物质使用(54%)、对身体/情感亲密的渴望(48%)、缺乏 HIV/STI 状况披露(44%)、心理驱动因素(即应对、抑郁;38%)、个人不喜欢使用避孕套(22%)、伴侣不喜欢/拒绝使用避孕套(19%)、卖淫(13%)和避孕套缺乏(9%)。高 STI 暴露风险患者(定义为过去 3 个月有≥2 个性伴侣且报告从不或有时使用避孕套的患者)中,报告不喜欢使用避孕套的比例更高(p=0.006);高风险和中风险(≥2 个性伴侣且使用避孕套“大多数时候”)组中,报告物质使用作为情况的比例更高(p=0.04)。
感知的 STI 暴露风险的情况多种多样,经常重叠,且取决于内部、环境和伴侣相关因素以及沟通不足。以护理为基础的 HIV/STI 传播行为干预措施必须解决这些因素的多样性和相互作用。