Literature DB >> 10759033

Frequency and intensity of crack use as predictors of women's involvement in HIV-related sexual risk behaviors.

J A Hoffman1, H Klein, M Eber, H Crosby.   

Abstract

Recent trends in the progression of the AIDS epidemic in the United States indicate that women's rates of acquiring HIV are escalating more rapidly than are men's. Consequently, there has been both an increasing interest in and a need for research targeting substance-abusing women's involvement in HIV risk behaviors. In recent years, strong suggestive evidence has arisen to suggest that women who use crack cocaine are at an elevated risk for acquiring HIV, probably as a result of their involvement in high-risk sexual behaviors. The present study is based on a sample of 1723 women from 22 locales around the United States who used crack cocaine at least once during the previous 30 days but who reported never having injected drugs at any point in their lifetime. Women were divided into four groups based on their frequency and intensity of using crack. In subsequent analyses, this grouping was used to predict the extent to which female crack users engage in five sexual risk behavior measures (number of sexual partners, number of drug-injecting sexual partners, number of times having sexual relations while high on alcohol and/or other drugs, number of times trading sex for drugs and/or money, and proportion of all sexual acts involving the use of protection). The data revealed that the women who used crack with the greatest frequency and the greatest intensity were the most heavily involved in risky sexual behaviors. They differed quite sharply from their lower-intensity and/or lower-frequency crack-using counterparts in terms of their HIV risk behavior involvement and in terms of their actual HIV seroprevalence rates.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10759033     DOI: 10.1016/s0376-8716(99)00095-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend        ISSN: 0376-8716            Impact factor:   4.492


  42 in total

1.  Changes in Exposure to Neighborhood Characteristics are Associated with Sexual Network Characteristics in a Cohort of Adults Relocating from Public Housing.

Authors:  Hannah L F Cooper; Sabriya Linton; Danielle F Haley; Mary E Kelley; Emily F Dauria; Conny Chen Karnes; Zev Ross; Josalin Hunter-Jones; Kristen K Renneker; Carlos Del Rio; Adaora Adimora; Gina Wingood; Richard Rothenberg; Loida E Bonney
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2015-06

2.  Correlates of sex trading among drug-using men who have sex with men.

Authors:  Peter A Newman; Fen Rhodes; Robert E Weiss
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2004-11       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Crack use as a public health problem in Canada: call for an evaluation of 'safer crack use kits'.

Authors:  Emma Haydon; Benedikt Fischer
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2005 May-Jun

4.  Risk factors in the relationship between gender and crack/cocaine.

Authors:  C W Lejuez; Marina A Bornovalova; Elizabeth K Reynolds; Stacey B Daughters; John J Curtin
Journal:  Exp Clin Psychopharmacol       Date:  2007-04       Impact factor: 3.157

5.  Emerging patterns of crack use in Mexico City.

Authors:  Avelardo Valdez; Charles Kaplan; Kathryn M Nowotny; Guillermina Natera-Rey; Alice Cepeda
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2015-04-27

6.  Norms, attitudes, and sex behaviors among women with incarcerated main partners.

Authors:  Melissa A Davey-Rothwell; Maria A Villarroel; Suzanne D Grieb; Carl A Latkin
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 3.671

7.  Investigation of "bath salts" use patterns within an online sample of users in the United States.

Authors:  Patrick S Johnson; Matthew W Johnson
Journal:  J Psychoactive Drugs       Date:  2014 Nov-Dec

8.  Cocaine administration dose-dependently increases sexual desire and decreases condom use likelihood: The role of delay and probability discounting in connecting cocaine with HIV.

Authors:  Matthew W Johnson; Evan S Herrmann; Mary M Sweeney; Robert S LeComte; Patrick S Johnson
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2016-12-05       Impact factor: 4.530

9.  Age and HIV sexual risk among women in methadone treatment.

Authors:  Malitta Engstrom; Tazuko Shibusawa; Nabila El-Bassel; Louisa Gilbert
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2011-01

10.  Cocaine-dependent adults and recreational cocaine users are more likely than controls to choose immediate unsafe sex over delayed safer sex.

Authors:  Mikhail N Koffarnus; Matthew W Johnson; Daisy G Y Thompson-Lake; Michael J Wesley; Terry Lohrenz; P Read Montague; Warren K Bickel
Journal:  Exp Clin Psychopharmacol       Date:  2016-08       Impact factor: 3.157

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