Adaora A Adimora1, James P Hughes, Jing Wang, Danielle F Haley, Carol E Golin, Manya Magnus, Anne Rompalo, Jessica Justman, Carlos del Rio, Wafaa El-Sadr, Sharon Mannheimer, Lydia Soto-Torres, Sally L Hodder. 1. *Division of Infectious Diseases, University of North Carolina Schools of Medicine and UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; †Department of Biostatistics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; ‡Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA; §FHI 360, Durham, NC; ‖School of Public Health and Health Services, The George Washington University, Washington, DC; ¶Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; #ICAP-Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY; **Rollins School of Public Health and Center for AIDS Research, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; ††Harlem Hospital Center, New York, NY; ‡‡NIAID, NIH, Bethesda, MD; and §§Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark, NJ.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We examined parameters of sexual partnerships, including respondents' participation in concurrency, belief that their partner had concurrent partnerships (partners' concurrency), and partnership intervals, among the 2099 women in HIV Prevention Trials Network 064, a study of women at high risk for HIV infection, in 10 U.S. communities. METHODS: We analyzed baseline survey responses about partnership dates to determine prevalence of participants' and partners' concurrency, intervals between partnerships, knowledge of whether recent partners had undergone HIV testing, and intercourse frequency during the preceding 6 months. RESULTS: Prevalence of participants' and partners' concurrency was 40% and 36%, respectively; 24% respondents had both concurrent partnerships and nonmonogamous partners. Among women with >1 partner and no concurrent partnerships themselves, the median gap between partners was 1 month. Multiple episodes of unprotected vaginal intercourse with ≥2 of their most recent partners was reported by 60% of women who had both concurrent partnerships and nonmonogamous partners, 50% with only concurrent partners and no partners' concurrency, and 33% with only partners' concurrency versus 14% of women with neither type of concurrency (P < 0.0001). Women who had any involvement with concurrency were also more likely than women with no concurrency involvement to report lack of awareness of whether recent partners had undergone HIV testing (participants' concurrency 41%, partners' concurrency 40%, both participants' and partners' concurrency 48%, neither 17%; P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: These network patterns and short gaps between partnerships may create substantial opportunities for HIV transmission in this sample of women at high risk for HIV infection.
OBJECTIVES: We examined parameters of sexual partnerships, including respondents' participation in concurrency, belief that their partner had concurrent partnerships (partners' concurrency), and partnership intervals, among the 2099 women in HIV Prevention Trials Network 064, a study of women at high risk for HIV infection, in 10 U.S. communities. METHODS: We analyzed baseline survey responses about partnership dates to determine prevalence of participants' and partners' concurrency, intervals between partnerships, knowledge of whether recent partners had undergone HIV testing, and intercourse frequency during the preceding 6 months. RESULTS: Prevalence of participants' and partners' concurrency was 40% and 36%, respectively; 24% respondents had both concurrent partnerships and nonmonogamous partners. Among women with >1 partner and no concurrent partnerships themselves, the median gap between partners was 1 month. Multiple episodes of unprotected vaginal intercourse with ≥2 of their most recent partners was reported by 60% of women who had both concurrent partnerships and nonmonogamous partners, 50% with only concurrent partners and no partners' concurrency, and 33% with only partners' concurrency versus 14% of women with neither type of concurrency (P < 0.0001). Women who had any involvement with concurrency were also more likely than women with no concurrency involvement to report lack of awareness of whether recent partners had undergone HIV testing (participants' concurrency 41%, partners' concurrency 40%, both participants' and partners' concurrency 48%, neither 17%; P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: These network patterns and short gaps between partnerships may create substantial opportunities for HIV transmission in this sample of women at high risk for HIV infection.
Authors: Adaora A Adimora; Victor J Schoenbach; Francis E A Martinson; Tamera Coyne-Beasley; Irene Doherty; Tonya R Stancil; Robert E Fullilove Journal: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Date: 2006-04-15 Impact factor: 3.731
Authors: J Justman; M Befus; J Hughes; J Wang; C E Golin; A A Adimora; I Kuo; D F Haley; C Del Rio; W M El-Sadr; A Rompalo; S Mannheimer; L Soto-Torres; S Hodder Journal: AIDS Behav Date: 2015-07
Authors: Adaora A Adimora; Victor J Schoenbach; Joan R Cates; Anna B Cope; Catalina Ramirez; Wizdom Powell; Robert P Agans Journal: AIDS Educ Prev Date: 2017-08
Authors: Jocelyn Elmes; Romain Silhol; Kristen L Hess; Lukyn M Gedge; Ashley Nordsletten; Roisin Staunton; Peter Anton; Barbara Shacklett; Ian McGowan; Que Dang; Adaora A Adimora; Dobromir T Dimitrov; Sevgi Aral; Senad Handanagic; Gabriela Paz-Bailey; Marie-Claude Boily Journal: Am J Reprod Immunol Date: 2020-06-09 Impact factor: 3.886
Authors: Danielle F Haley; Regine Haardörfer; Michael R Kramer; Adaora A Adimora; Gina M Wingood; Neela D Goswami; Anna Rubtsova; Christina Ludema; DeMarc A Hickson; Catalina Ramirez; Zev Ross; Hector Bolivar; Hannah L F Cooper Journal: Ann Epidemiol Date: 2017-04-10 Impact factor: 3.797
Authors: Christina Ludema; Irene A Doherty; Becky L White; Cathy A Simpson; Olga Villar-Loubet; Eleanor McLellan-Lemal; Christine M O'Daniels; Adaora A Adimora Journal: J Health Care Poor Underserved Date: 2015-02
Authors: Brooke E E Montgomery; Anne Rompalo; James Hughes; Jing Wang; Danielle Haley; Lydia Soto-Torres; Wairimu Chege; Jessica Justman; Irene Kuo; Carol Golin; Paula Frew; Sharon Mannheimer; Sally Hodder Journal: Am J Public Health Date: 2015-03-19 Impact factor: 9.308
Authors: Jacqueline E Rudolph; Stephen R Cole; Joseph J Eron; Angela D Kashuba; Adaora A Adimora Journal: Epidemiology Date: 2019-05 Impact factor: 4.822
Authors: Christina Ludema; Irene A Doherty; Becky L White; Olga Villar-Loubet; Eleanor McLellan-Lemal; Christine M OʼDaniels; Adaora A Adimora Journal: Sex Transm Dis Date: 2015-09 Impact factor: 2.830
Authors: Danielle F Haley; Gina M Wingood; Michael R Kramer; Regine Haardörfer; Adaora A Adimora; Anna Rubtsova; Andrew Edmonds; Neela D Goswami; Christina Ludema; DeMarc A Hickson; Catalina Ramirez; Zev Ross; Hector Bolivar; Hannah L F Cooper Journal: Arch Sex Behav Date: 2018-04-25