Gender Differences in HIV Risk Behaviors Among Persons Involved in the U.S. Criminal Justice System and Living with HIV or at Risk for HIV: A “Seek, Test, Treat, and Retain” Harmonization Consortium

The U.S. female criminal justice (CJ) population is rapidly growing, yet large-scale studies exploring gender-specific HIV risk behaviors in the CJ population are lacking. This analysis uses baseline data on adults with a CJ history from eight U.S. studies in an NIH-funded “Seek, Test, Treat, Retain...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS and behavior 2017-10, Vol.21 (10), p.2945-2957
Hauptverfasser: Loeliger, Kelsey B., Biggs, Mary L., Young, Rebekah, Seal, David W., Beckwith, Curt G., Kuo, Irene, Gordon, Michael S., Altice, Frederick L., Ouellet, Lawrence J., Cunningham, William E., Young, Jeremy D., Springer, Sandra A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The U.S. female criminal justice (CJ) population is rapidly growing, yet large-scale studies exploring gender-specific HIV risk behaviors in the CJ population are lacking. This analysis uses baseline data on adults with a CJ history from eight U.S. studies in an NIH-funded “Seek, Test, Treat, Retain” harmonization consortium. Data were collected using a standardized HIV risk behavior assessment tool and pooled across studies to describe participants’ characteristics and risk behaviors. Multilevel mixed-effects logistic regression models were used to test for gender-based behavior differences. Among 784 HIV-positive (21.4% female) and 5521 HIV-negative (8.5% female) participants, HIV-positive women had higher odds than HIV-positive men of engaging in condomless sexual intercourse (AOR 1.84 [1.16–2.95]) with potentially sero-discordant partners (AOR 2.40 [1.41–4.09]) and of sharing injection equipment (AOR 3.36 [1.31–8.63]). HIV risk reduction interventions targeting CJ-involved women with HIV are urgently needed as this population may represent an under-recognized potential source of HIV transmission.
ISSN:1090-7165
1573-3254
DOI:10.1007/s10461-017-1722-9