HIV prevention and street-based male sex workers: an evaluation of brief interventions.
Abstract
This study shows that brief interventions to reduce HIV risk were acceptable to male sex workers (MSWs) and are efficacious for reducing
unprotected anal sex during paid sexual encounters. These methods should be developed to include a suitable mode of replication and rolled out
across Africa. particularly Sub-Saharan Africa, which is hard hit by HIV/AIDS and where males who sell sex remain taboo.
This study is particularly interesting and important because MSWs who have sex with men in Africa and. even more so. those who are
street-based are highly stigmatized. The stigma is doubled if they are also drug users. The methods used in this study to mobilize 399 MSWs and
get 112 to participate in the evaluation of efficacy should serve as a lesson on how to produce greater retention in these cohorts as two-thirds of
MSWs who enrolled for the brief intervention completed it, and condom use during paid anal sex increased post intervention.
URI
http://flOOO.com/prime/contributor/evaluate/articleI14318http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/44162
Citation
AIDS Educ Prev 2006 Jun; 18(3):204-15Publisher
Center for HIV Prevention and Research, University of Nairobi
Subject
Public Health & EpidemiologySocial & Behavioral Determinants of Health
Global Health
Epidemiology
Collections
- College of Health Sciences (CHS) [87]
- Journal Articles [329]