Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Blusson Hall Room 10522, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada.
Epidemiology and Population Health, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Arch Sex Behav. 2019 May;48(4):1015-1040. doi: 10.1007/s10508-019-1418-5. Epub 2019 Mar 19.
Love remains hidden in HIV research in favor of a focus on risk. Among 1424 women living with HIV in Canada, we explored (1) whether eight facets of sex and intimacy (marital status, sexual activity, physical intimacy, emotional closeness, power equity, sexual exclusivity, relationship duration, and couple HIV serostatus) may coalesce into distinct relationship types, and (2) how these relationship types may be linked to love as well as various social, psychological, and structural factors. Five latent classes were identified: no relationship (46.5%), relationships without sex (8.6%), and three types of sexual relationships-short term (15.4%), long term/unhappy (6.4%), and long term/happy (23.2%, characterized by equitable power, high levels of physical and emotional closeness, and mainly HIV-negative partners). While women in long-term/happy relationships were most likely to report feeling love for and wanted by someone "all of the time," love was not exclusive to sexual or romantic partners and a sizeable proportion of women reported affection across latent classes. Factors independently associated with latent class membership included age, children living at home, sexism/genderism, income, sex work, violence, trauma, depression, HIV treatment, awareness of treatment's prevention benefits, and HIV-related stigma. Findings reveal the diversity of women's experiences with respect to love, sex, and relationships and draw attention to the sociostructural factors shaping intimate partnering in the context of HIV. A nuanced focus on promoting healthy relationships and supportive social environments may offer a more comprehensive approach to supporting women's overall sexual health and well-being than programs focused solely on sexual risk reduction.
在 HIV 研究中,爱被隐藏在风险关注之下。在加拿大,我们对 1424 名 HIV 感染者进行了研究,探索了以下两个问题:(1)性和亲密关系的八个方面(婚姻状况、性行为、身体亲密、情感亲近、权力平等、性专一、关系持续时间和夫妻 HIV 血清状况)是否可以合并为不同的关系类型;(2)这些关系类型与爱以及各种社会、心理和结构因素有何关联。研究确定了五个潜在的关系类型:没有关系(46.5%)、没有性的关系(8.6%),以及三种性关系类型:短期关系(15.4%)、长期不幸福关系(6.4%)和长期幸福关系(23.2%,特点是权力平等、身体和情感亲近程度高,且主要为 HIV 阴性伴侣)。尽管长期幸福关系中的女性最有可能报告“一直”对某人感到爱和被需要,但爱并非仅限于性伴侣或浪漫伴侣,相当一部分女性在不同潜在关系类型中都报告了情感。与潜在关系类型相关的因素包括年龄、与子女同住、性别歧视、收入、性工作、暴力、创伤、抑郁、HIV 治疗、对治疗预防效果的认识,以及与 HIV 相关的耻辱感。研究结果揭示了女性在性、爱和关系方面的多样性,并提请注意塑造 HIV 背景下亲密关系的社会结构因素。关注促进健康的关系和支持性的社会环境,可能比仅仅关注性风险降低的项目更全面地促进女性的整体性健康和幸福感。