| Literature DB >> 27685158 |
Jesse L Clark1, Amaya G Perez-Brumer2, Eddy R Segura1, Hector J Salvatierra3, Jorge Sanchez3, Javier R Lama3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: New strategies to support partner notification (PN) are critical for STD control and require detailed understanding of how specific individual and partnership characteristics guide notification decisions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27685158 PMCID: PMC5042523 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0163905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participant and Partner Characteristics of MSM/TW Recently Diagnosed with HIV and/or STI; Lima, Peru 2011.
| Age | Median (IQR) | 28 (24–35) |
| Education | High School Graduate | 127 (36.4%) |
| University/Vocational Training | 143 (41.0%) | |
| Sexual Identity (n = 344) | Heterosexual | 11 (3.2%) |
| Bisexual | 54 (15.7%) | |
| Homosexual | 228 (66.3%) | |
| Transgender | 51 (14.8%) | |
| Sexual Role (n = 347) | 50 (14.4%) | |
| 135 (38.9%) | ||
| 162 (46.7%) | ||
| HIV/STI Diagnosis (n = 350) | HIV | 81 (23.2%) |
| HIV/STI Co-Infection | 89 (25.4%) | |
| Non-HIV STI | 180 (51.4%) | |
| Specific STI(s) Diagnosed (n = 350) | HIV | 170 (48.6%) |
| Syphilis | 187 (53.4%) | |
| Gonorrhea/Chlamydia | 46 (13.1%) | |
| HSV-2 | 32 (9.1%) | |
| Number of Male Sex Partners (3 Months) (n = 350) | 1 | 71 (20.3%) |
| 2 or 3 | 84 (24.0%) | |
| ≥4 | 195 (55.7%) | |
| Type of Partner (n = 844) | Stable | 300 (35.6%) |
| Casual | 413 (48.9%) | |
| Commercial Sex client | 124 (14.7%) | |
| Commercial Sex Worker | 7 (0.8%) | |
| Partner Sexual Identity | Heterosexual | 112 (14.2%) |
| Bisexual | 315 (40.1%) | |
| Homosexual | 341 (43.4%) | |
| Transgender | 18 (2.3%) | |
| Partner Sexual Role | 440 (53.1%) | |
| (n = 829) | 127 (15.3%) | |
| 262 (31.6%) | ||
| UAI with Partner (Insertive and/or Receptive) (n = 705) | 304 (42.5%) | |
| Partner Likely Source of STI (n = 715) | 227 (27.0%) | |
| Anticipate Future Sexual Contact with Partner (n = 388) | 443 (52.9%) |
*As described by the participant
Incentives and Barriers to Partner Notification (By Partner Type) Among MSM/TW Recently Diagnosed with HIV and/or STD; Lima, Peru 2011.
| Partner Type | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Main (N = 300) | Casual (N = 413) | Commercial (N = 131) | |
| To Protect Participant’s Health | 189 (80.4%) | 116 (64.1%) | 10 (37.0%) |
| To Protect Partner’s Health | 125 (53.2%) | 100 (55.2%) | 22 (81.5%) |
| To Protect Community Health | 72 (30.6%) | 56 (30.9%) | 9 (33.3%) |
| To Maintain Trust in Partnership | 125 (53.2%) | 76 (42.0%) | 10 (37.0%) |
| Fear of Rejection by Partner | 65 (100.0%) | 86 (37.1%) | 20 (19.2%) |
| Fear of Violence from Partner | 39 (60.0%) | 79 (34.0%) | 29 (27.9%) |
| Fear of Gossip in Community | 26 (40.0%) | 72 (31.0%) | 13 (22.1%) |
| No Contact Information for Partner | 21 (32.3%) | 54 (23.3%) | 44 (42.3%) |
| Not Important to Notify Partner | 18 (27.7%) | 62 (26.7%) | 19 (18.3%) |
Participant and Partner Characteristics Associated with Anticipated Partner Notification Among MSM/TW Recently Diagnosed with HIV and/or STD; Lima, Peru 2011.
| Age | Years | 348 | 1.00 (0.99–1.01) | 0.30 | 1.00 (0.99–1.01) | 0.72 | |
| Education | Non-High School Graduate | 79 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | |
| High School Graduate | 127 | 1.13 (0.88–1.46) | 0.33 | 1.01 (0.79–1.28) | 0.94 | ||
| University/Vocational Training | 143 | 1.32 (1.04–1.67) | <0.05 | 1.13 (0.91–1.41) | 0.27 | ||
| Participant Sexual Role | 50 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | ||
| 135 | 0.63 (0.50–0.79) | <0.05 | 0.82 (0.65–1.03) | 0.09 | |||
| 162 | 0.82 (0.68–1.00) | 0.06 | 0.94 (0.77–1.15) | 0.56 | |||
| Type of HIV/STD Diagnosis | Non-HIV STD | 180 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | |
| HIV | 81 | 0.67 (0.53–0.86) | <0.05 | ||||
| HIV/STD Co-Infection | 89 | 0.93 (0.77–1.12) | 0.48 | 0.86 (0.72–1.04) | 0.13 | ||
| Number of Male Sexual Partners (3 Months) | 1 | 71 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | |
| 2–3 | 84 | 0.82 (0.68–1.00) | 0.06 | 0.86 (0.71–1.04) | 0.12 | ||
| ≥4 | 195 | 0.63 (0.53–0.75) | <0.05 | ||||
| Partner Type | Stable | 235/300 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | |
| Casual | 181/413 | 0.58 (0.50–0.68) | <0.05 | ||||
| Commercial | 27/131 | 0.33 (0.24–0.46) | <0.05 | ||||
| Partner Sexual Identity | Hetero/Bisexual | 204/427 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | |
| Homosexual | 206/341 | 1.23 (1.04–1.45) | <0.05 | 1.08 (0.90–1.29) | 0.41 | ||
| Transgender | 13/18 | 1.57 (1.08–2.29) | <0.05 | 1.12 (0.77–1.82) | 0.43 | ||
| UAI | No UAI with Partner | 176/411 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | |
| UAI with Partner | 189/304 | 1.47 (1.26–1.71) | <0.05 | 1.11 (0.96–1.29) | 0.15 | ||
| Perceived STI Source | Partner Not Perceived as Likely Source of HIV/STD | 290/613 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | |
| Partner Perceived as Likely Source of HIV/STD | 152/227 | 1.35 (1.17–1.55) | <0.05 | ||||
| Future Sexual Contact | Future Sexual Contact with Partner Not Anticipated | 160/395 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | |
| Future Sexual Contact with Partner Anticipated | 278/343 | 1.58 (1.35–1.86) | <0.05 | ||||
*Due to clustering of data at participant-level, n/N reported for Partner Characteristics only
Qualitative Analysis of Perceptions, Incentives, and Barriers to Partner Notification Among MSM/TW Recently Diagnosed with HIV/STI; Lima, Peru 2011.
| “There is a greater responsibility when you live with someone or you have a longer time together in your sexual relations… with a stable partner there’s more responsibility to communicate with them about what’s going on.” (Enrique; Gay, Syphilis) | |
| “I think that it’s important to tell your partner. Because in that way, he is informed and can take the necessary steps…. I’m referring to a main partner, because a casual, you see them one time and then you never see them again.” (Julian; Gay, Proctitis) | |
| “I would never tell them, simply because they are “hit and runs” [ | |
| “I was with him in the movie theater [ | |
| “If a guy finds out that you infected him, one of your clients, then you are already done for [ | |
| “Because it’s more difficult to tell a partner, in this case bisexual, that I was with a man, than to tell a man I was with a woman.” (Jose; Bisexual, HIV/Syphilis) | |
| “For the fear that they are going to say to you, ‘What are you doing with men?’” (Carlos; Heterosexual, HIV) | |
| “So that he can get tested and see if he’s okay. That way we can both know that we’re well, we’re healthy. Because, apparently, someone can look healthy and you don’t know how they are really.” (Javier; Gay, Urethritis) | |
| “It’s a question of mutual care and, if I love him, I have to care for him like I believe he would do with me.” (Jose; Bisexual, HIV/Syphilis) | |
| “It’s more important to talk with your partner, so that they trust you. We all make mistakes, and if you tell them in time they may understand.” (Ivan; Bisexual, Urethritis) | |
| “With a main partner, you share things, you achieve a level of trust—in quotations, ‘trust’—a level of ‘trust’ so maybe you can tell them.” (Aldo; Heterosexual, Urethritis) | |
| “For me, it’s important to tell my partner, my true partner, but it makes me a little afraid of rejection. Because of that ‘Where did it come from?’ It came from being with other partners, and she is going to think the worst, she is going to throw me out.” (David; Heterosexual, HIV) | |
| “It’s a fear, fear of losing that contact, their friendship, or whatever. It’s a fear.” (Aldo; Heterosexual, Urethritis) | |
| “I don’t know him well, and I am a little afraid to tell him. Because I see him around, he works in the street, he has a group that’s, let’s say, very “rough” [ | |
| “My fear is always that, ‘How can I say I have HIV? How are you going to react? Will you grab me and punch me, or hit me, or will you cut me off? What will you do, what will be your reaction?” (Cristina; Transgender, HIV) | |
| “That he would reject me… or that he would say when he sees me, ‘That faggot [ | |
| “Because there is no one trustworthy and I can’t confide in anyone other than my family. And I know that sometimes there are these little arguments, resentments, I tell someone and we fight, and so he tells another person, and another, and another, so then the whole world finds out.” (Princesa; Transgender, HIV) | |
| “I’m not going to tell him because it’s unlikely that I will see him again. Or maybe I will see him, but most likely, I won’t.” (Oscar; Gay, Syphilis) | |
| “I don’t know where to find them. It was, as they say, a casual relationship, I met them on the street, on some avenue.” (Enrique; Gay, Syphilis) | |
| “Because, really, you need to work. At the moment you tell them, they are going to reject you and won’t ever want to come near you.” (Scarlet; Transgender, HIV) | |