Ragsdale Kathleen, Gore-Felton Cheryl, Koopman Cheryl, Seal David W
Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures, and the Social Science Research Center, Mississippi State University, 1 Research Blvd, Suite 103, Starkville, MS 39759.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, 401 Quarry Road, Palo Alto, CA 94304.
Sex Res Social Policy. 2009 Mar;6(1):56-69. doi: 10.1525/srsp.2009.6.1.56.
Young adult Latinas are disproportionately overrepresented among HIV/AIDS incidence cases in the United States, and heterosexual contact has been identified as the primary mode of HIV transmission. This study examined sexual risk behavior among 40 low-income native-born and foreign-born Latinas of Mexican or Puerto Rican ethnicity seeking services at a community-based family planning clinic in a large Midwestern city. Participants were unmarried, noncohabiting Latinas ages 18-29 who were involved in primary heterosexual relationships. Survey data that were collected from participants included sociodemographics, relationship power, acculturation, and unprotected sex with primary and extradyadic partners. After statistically controlling for age and ethnic identity, the authors found that Latinas with less relationship power were significantly more likely to report having unprotected sex with primary partners. These findings suggest that HIV-prevention intervention efforts that focus on relationship power among young heterosexual Latinas in the United States may be effective in reducing sexual risk behavior.
在美国,年轻成年拉丁裔女性在艾滋病病毒/艾滋病发病病例中所占比例过高,异性接触已被确定为艾滋病病毒传播的主要方式。本研究调查了40名低收入的、出生在美国本土及外国的墨西哥或波多黎各裔拉丁裔女性的性风险行为,这些女性在中西部一个大城市的一家社区计划生育诊所寻求服务。参与者为18至29岁未婚、非同居且处于主要异性恋关系中的拉丁裔女性。从参与者收集的调查数据包括社会人口统计学、关系权力、文化适应以及与主要伴侣和非主要伴侣的无保护性行为。在对年龄和种族身份进行统计学控制后,作者发现关系权力较小的拉丁裔女性更有可能报告与主要伴侣有无保护性行为。这些发现表明,针对美国年轻异性恋拉丁裔女性关系权力的艾滋病毒预防干预措施可能有效减少性风险行为。