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Extramarital partnerships exacerbate high HIV prevalence rates in many communities in sub-Saharan Africa. We explored contextual risk factors and suggested interventions to reduce extramarital partnerships among couples in the fishing communities on Lake Victoria, Kenya. We conducted 12 focus group discussions with 9-10 participants each (N = 118) and 16 in-depth interviews (N = 16) with fishermen and their spouses. Couples who participated were consented and separated for simultaneous gender-matched discussions/interviews. Interview topics included courtship and marriage, relationship and sexual satisfaction, extramarital relationships and how to intervene on HIV risks. Coding, analysis, and interpretation of the transcripts followed grounded theory tenets that allow analytical themes to emerge from the participants. Our results showed that extramarital partnerships were perceived to be widespread and were attributed to factors related to sexual satisfaction such as women needing more foreplay before intercourse, discrepancies in sexual desire, and boredom with the current sexual repertoire. Participants also reported that financial and sociophysical factors such as family financial support and physical separation, contributed to the formation of extramarital partnerships. Participants made suggestions for interventions that reduce extramarital partnerships to minimize HIV risks at the community, couple, and individual level. These suggestions emphasized improving community education, spousal communication, and self-evaluation for positive behavior change. Future studies can draw upon these findings as a basis for designing community-owned interventions that seek to reduce community-level HIV risk through a reduction in the number of sexual partners.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-016-0930-0 | DOI Listing |
Longit Life Course Stud
April 2025
University of Geneva, Switzerland.
India has undergone a dynamic demographic transition resulting in relatively low fertility. In this context, one would expect that the population of childless women has recently become more heterogeneous. In particular, one would suspect a process of polarisation with a growing distinction between women who are unable to give birth and women who forgo motherhood for one reason or another.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAIDS Res Ther
July 2024
West China School of Public Health and West China Fourth Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
Background: Males have accounted for a significant share of new HIV infections among young people in the recent years. This study aimed to identify the factors associated with risky sexual behaviors, including early sexual debut, multiple sexual partnership and condomless sex, among sexually active male college students and provide implications for tailored health interventions.
Methods: The cross-sectional study was conducted from December 2020 to December 2021 in 16 colleges that were located in Sichuan Province, one of the high-risk areas in China.
J Pediatr Urol
August 2024
Department of Pediatric Urology, Fondazione IRCCS Cà Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Milano, Italy.
Background: In literature studies exploring long-term psychosexual development and intimacy of adults living with the complex genitourinary conditions associated with classic bladder exstrophy (BE) are scarce, with small sample sizes and lacking in methodology.
Objective: This study aims to examine areas of potential psychosexual distress in adults born with classic BE to develop targeted clinical interventions.
Study Design: The validated Sexrelation Evaluation Schedule Assessment Monitoring (SESAMO) questionnaire was administered to all BE patients aged ≥18 years operated on in our tertiary referral center during infancy.
Arch Sex Behav
August 2023
Rwanda Zambia Health Research Group, Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine and Hubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Laney Graduate School, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, 30322, USA.
Negotiating sexual agreements in combination with couples' voluntary HIV counseling and testing (CVCT) may help further reduce HIV transmission in Zambian concordant HIV-negative couples (CNC). Though CVCT has been shown to reduce HIV transmission in CNC by 47%, approximately half of residual infections occur in this group. We developed a "Strengthening Our Vows" video session to foster communication and negotiation of explicit sexual agreements to reduce concurrent sexual exposures and prevent HIV transmission to the spouse due to unprotected, extramarital sex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Sex Behav
May 2023
Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA.
Extramarital partnerships are highly stigmatized in many societies and are typically excluded from studies of family dynamics and social support. Nevertheless, in many societies such relationships are common and can have important impacts on resource security and health outcomes. However, current studies of these relationships come mainly from ethnographic studies, with quantitative data extremely rare.
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