| Literature DB >> 1931142 |
Abstract
The present public health strategy to encourage the adoption of "safe sex" practices to contain the AIDS epidemic in America is incomplete. Current policy is responsive to and appropriate for control of homosexual, but not heterosexual transmission. Powerful societal forces restrict a woman's perception of risk. Consequently, the adoption of safe sex (condom use/insistence on use) by women at risk has not matched safe sex practice by homosexual men. Predictably, pattern two (heterosexual, maternal-fetal) HIV transmission is now rapidly increasing in the United States, particularly among minority women. In anticipation of an intensified pattern two subepidemic, AIDS containment policy should be reoriented to develop the role of women in AIDS prevention. An initiative, termed "sexual self-defense" (SSD), combines the technology of double-barrier (female irrespective of male) protection with a "universal precautions" approach to long-term sexual risk management. The initiative addresses both per-contact infectiousness and new partner acquisition, the principal determinants of HIV spread. As a female-targeted strategy, SSD is a timely supplement to existing programs, consistent with the direction of contemporary women's movements in the United States. A "street smart" approach, SSD bridges ethnic and socioeconomic individual differences. As a unifying philosophy of risk management in health promotion, SSD may avert the threatened fragmentation of AIDS control from existing programs of sexually transmitted disease control and teenage pregnancy prevention.Entities:
Keywords: Americas; Behavior; Developed Countries; Diseases; Examinations And Diagnoses; Government; Heterosexuals; Hiv Infections--prevention and control; North America; Northern America; Obstacles; Organization And Administration; Perception; Political Factors; Population At Risk; Psychological Factors; Research Methodology; Risk Reduction Behavior--women; Screening; Sex Behavior--changes; United States; Viral Diseases
Mesh:
Year: 1991 PMID: 1931142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Prev Med ISSN: 0749-3797 Impact factor: 5.043