Last data update: Dec 09, 2024. (Total: 48320 publications since 2009)
Records 1-3 (of 3 Records) |
Query Trace: O'Daniels CM[original query] |
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Characteristics of African American women and their partners with perceived concurrent partnerships in 4 rural counties in the Southeastern US
Ludema C , Doherty IA , White BL , Villar-Loubet O , McLellan-Lemal E , O'Daniels CM , Adimora AA . Sex Transm Dis 2015 42 (9) 498-504 BACKGROUND: To the individual with concurrent partners, it is thought that having concurrent partnerships confers no greater risk of acquiring HIV than having multiple consecutive partnerships. However, an individual whose partner has concurrent partnerships (partner's concurrency) is at increased risk for incident HIV infection. We sought to better understand relationships characterized by partner's concurrency among African American women. METHODS: A total of 1013 African American women participated in a cross-sectional survey from 4 rural Southeastern counties. RESULTS: Older age at first sex was associated with lower prevalence of partner's concurrency (prevalence ratio, 0.70; 95% confidence interval, 0.57-0.87), but the participant's age was not associated with partner's concurrency. After adjusting for covariates, ever having experienced intimate partner violence (IPV) and forced sex were most strongly associated with partner's concurrency (prevalence ratios, 1.61 [95% confidence intervals, 1.23-2.11] and 1.65 [1.20-2.26], respectively). Women in mutually monogamous partnerships were the most likely to receive economic support from their partners; women whose partners had concurrent partnerships did not report more economic benefit than did those whose partners were monogamous. CONCLUSIONS: Associations between history of IPV and forced sex with partner's concurrency suggest that women with these experiences may particularly benefit from interventions to reduce partner's concurrency in addition to support for reducing IPV and other sexual risks. To inform these interventions, further research to understand partnerships characterized by partner's concurrency is warranted. |
Religiosity, spirituality, and HIV risk behaviors among African American women from four rural counties in the southeastern U.S
Ludema C , Doherty IA , White BL , Simpson CA , Villar-Loubet O , McLellan-Lemal E , O'Daniels CM , Adimora AA . J Health Care Poor Underserved 2015 26 (1) 168-81 In a cross-sectional survey of 1,013 African American women from rural Alabama and North Carolina, we examined the relationship of (1) organizational religiosity (i.e., religious service attendance), (2) non-organizational religiosity (e.g., reading religious materials), and (3) spirituality with these outcomes: women's reports of their sexual behaviors and perceptions of their partners' risk characteristics. Women with high non-organizational religiosity, compared with low, had fewer sex partners in the past 12 months (adjusted prevalence ratio (aPR): 0.58, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.42, 0.80) and were less likely to have concurrent partnerships (aPR: 0.47, 95% CI: 0.30, 0.73). Similar results were observed for spirituality, and protective but weaker associations were observed for organizational religiosity. Weak associations were observed between organizational religiosity, non-organizational religiosity, and spirituality with partners' risk characteristics. Further exploration of how religiosity and spirituality are associated with protective sexual behaviors is needed to promote safe sex for African American women. |
Sexual risk behaviors among African-American and Hispanic women in five counties in the Southeastern United States: 2008-2009
McLellan-Lemal E , O'Daniels CM , Marks G , Villar-Loubet O , Doherty IA , Simpson C , Weiss S , Hanna B , Adimora AA , White BL , Wheeling JT , Borkowf CB . Womens Health Issues 2011 22 (1) e9-18 PURPOSE: We examined sexual risk behaviors and unrecognized HIV infection among heterosexually active African-American and Hispanic women. METHODS: Women not previously diagnosed with HIV infection were recruited in rural counties in North Carolina (African American) and Alabama (African American), and an urban county in southern Florida (Hispanic) using multiple methods. They completed a computer-administered questionnaire and were tested for HIV infection. RESULTS: Between October 2008 and September 2009, 1,527 women (1,013 African American and 514 Hispanic) enrolled in the study. Median age was 35 years (range, 18-59), 33% were married or living as married, 50% had an annual household income of $12,000 or less, and 56% were employed full or part time. Two women (0.13%) tested positive for HIV. In the past 12 months, 19% had been diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection (other than HIV), 87% engaged in unprotected vaginal intercourse (UVI), and 26% engaged in unprotected anal intercourse (UAI). In multivariate analysis, UAI was significantly (p < .05) more likely among those who reported ever being pregnant, binge drinking in the past 30 days, ever exchanging sex for things needed or wanted, engaging in UVI, or being of Hispanic ethnicity. UAI was also more likely to occur with partners with whom women had a current or past relationship as opposed to casual partners. CONCLUSION: A high percentage of our sample of heterosexually active women of color had recently engaged in sexual risk behaviors, particularly UAI. More research is needed to elucidate the interpersonal dynamics that may promote this high-risk behavior. Educational messages that explicitly address the risks of heterosexual anal intercourse need to be developed for heterosexually active women and their male partners. |
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