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Marital Sex Biggest HIV Risk
For Women Around The World
For a growing number of women in rural Mexico and around the
world marital sex represents their single greatest risk for HIV
infection. According to a new Mailman School of Public Health
Study, because marital infidelity by men is so deeply ingrained
across many cultures, existing HIV prevention programs are putting
a growing number of women at risk of developing the HIV virus.
The findings, indicating that globally, prevention programs that
take a "just say no approach and encourage men to be monogamous
are unlikely to be effective, underline the need for programs
that make extramarital sex safer, rather than unrealistically
trying to eradicate it. These findings are published in the June
2007 issue of the American Journal of Public Health.
The articles lead author, Jennifer S. Hirsch, PhD, associate
professor of Sociomedical Sciences at Columbia University Mailman
School of Public Health, is principal investigator on a large
comparative study showing that the inevitability of mens infidelity
in marriage is true across cultures. This was borne out in the
research conducted in rural Mexico as well as in similar studies
she is overseeing in rural New Guinea and southeastern Nigeria,
which are published in the same issue of the American Journal
of Public Health. Two additional studies underway, in Uganda and
Vietnam, are expected to show similar results.
The Mexico study was based on six months of anthropological research,
including participant observation, 20 marital case studies, 37
key informant interviews, and document analysis to explore the
factors that shape HIV risk among married women in Degollado,
one of the Mexicos rural communities.
In rural Mexico, reputation is a critical aspect of sexual identity,
and attention to reputation provides insight into why people act
in ways that are socially safer, but physically risky. "What we
found in our research was that culturally constructed notions
of reputation in this community led to sexual behavior designed
to minimize mens social, rather than viral, risks, said
Dr. Hirsch. "We also saw that mens desire for companionate
intimacy actually increases womens risk for HIV infection.
A major factor in the study was that married men in the community
left their homes to travel to the United States or large Mexican
cities to find work. While away for long periods, they engaged
in extra-marital and unsafe sex, which can lead to HIV infection.
When men return home, they are said to be on honeymoon again,
which includes resuming marital sexual relations.
"The result is that women are infected by their husbands, the
very people with whom they are supposed to be having sex and,
according to social conventions of Mexico, the only people with
whom they are ever supposed to have sex, said Dr. Hirsch. "This
challenges existing approaches to HIV prevention. It renders abstinence
impossible and unilateral monogamy ineffective. Marital condom
use is also not a serious option, because of womens deep, culturally
supported commitment to the fiction of fidelity.
In New Guinea, researchers also saw labor migration as a major
contributor to infidelity. Moreover, many men did not view sexual
fidelity as necessary for achieving a happy marriage, but they
viewed drinking and "looking for women as important for male
friendships.
In the Nigerian study, the social organization of infidelity
was shaped by economic inequality, aspirations for modern lifestyles,
gender disparities, and contradictory moralities. There, it is
mens anxieties and ambivalence about masculinity, sexual morality,
and social reputation in the context of seeking modern lifestyles
rather than immoral sexual behavior and traditional culture
that exacerbate the risks of HIV/AIDS.
According to Dr. Hirsch, the policy implications of these findings
are clear. "This study has direct implications for the types of
prevention programs we should be supporting, she observes.
"We might find mens persistent and widespread participation
extramarital sex to be troubling but its a deeply rooted
aspect of social organization, and one that is unlikely to be
easily changed. Public health programs alone cant stop extramarital
sex, so we need to think about how to reduce the risk. Saying
that be faithful will protect married women is not true
unilateral monogamy is not an effective prevention strategy.
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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