HIV/STD Risk Factors for Women with Violent Male Partners

Reports a 4-month study in low-income communities comparatively examining 167 women -- categorized as nonabused, emotionally abused, or physically abused in their primary relationships -- on sexual risk factors. Physically abused women differed in several ways: greater STD (sexually transmitted dise...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sex roles 2000-04, Vol.42 (7/8), p.661-689
Hauptverfasser: Beadnell, Blair, Baker, Sharon A, Morrison, Diane M, Knox, Kay
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container_issue 7/8
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container_title Sex roles
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creator Beadnell, Blair
Baker, Sharon A
Morrison, Diane M
Knox, Kay
description Reports a 4-month study in low-income communities comparatively examining 167 women -- categorized as nonabused, emotionally abused, or physically abused in their primary relationships -- on sexual risk factors. Physically abused women differed in several ways: greater STD (sexually transmitted disease) risk, psychosocial distress, & substance use; more traditional gender-role beliefs; lower self-esteem; greater likelihood of having been raped or engaged in sex for pay; & smaller likelihood of attending the project's STD/HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) risk reduction groups. Within primary relationships, they differed in amount of decision-making power about safer sex, likelihood of nonmonogamy, use of substances before sex, & self-efficacy about initiating condom use. African American women reported higher rates of emotional abuse than white women, a finding related mainly to their lower socioeconomic status in this sample. 6 Tables, 62 References. Adapted from the source document.
doi_str_mv 10.1023/a:1007003623810
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subjects Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
Battered Women
Black White Differences
Domestic violence
Family Violence
Females
Health Education
HIV
Human immunodeficiency virus
Individual Differences
Low Income Areas
Low Income Groups
Men
Opposite Sex Relations
Partners
Racial Differences
Risk
Risk factors
Sexually transmitted diseases
STD
Venereal Diseases
Violence
Women
title HIV/STD Risk Factors for Women with Violent Male Partners
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