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The
fidelity fallacy: The link between HIV infection and marriage
Serra Sippel, Center for American Progress
August 09, 2007
http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2007/08/fidelity.html
With 80 percent
of HIV cases worldwide transmitted by sexual contact, promoting
marriage and sexual fidelity would seem to make sense as a way to
limit the spread of AIDS. Yet this politically popular approach
to public health among conservative policymakers in the United States
promotes the false assumption that within marriage, sex is always
safe—and consequently puts unknowing men and women at increased
risk of infection. This fidelity fallacy holds enormous implications
for the effectiveness of our government's global AIDS prevention
program, where almost $400 million was spent last year in 15 focus
countries for the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief,
or PEPFAR.
In most societies,
cultures, and religions, the institution of marriage marks an important
transition from childhood to adulthood and plays an essential role
in social organisation. In addition to the many social and economic
factors that lead (or force) people into marriage, ideals and judgments
about fidelity are pervasive throughout society and often prioritize
marriage and marital fidelity. Laws often penalize extramarital
sex, economic and health policies encourage fidelity, religious
leaders frequently condemn infidelity as immoral, and in the general
population there is often disapproval of extramarital sex—despite
the frequency with which people fall below the ideal of marital
monogamy.
A recent study
(www.mailman.hs.columbia.edu/sms/cgsh/lmhiv1.html)
funded by the National Institutes of Health and published by the
American Journal of Public Health found that while sexual fidelity
is often an ideal, what fidelity means to individuals may vary and
is not seen by all married people in all cultures as necessary to
achieving a satisfactory marriage. In fact, many men across cultures
consider extramarital sex as an important component to social acceptance,
a condition for achieving successful masculinity, and a reality
that coexists with migrant labor practices. This study underscores
the need to fix dangerous deficiencies within U.S. global AIDS policy,
and particularly the programs that do not address these realities.
Recent findings
from the multi-site study in Mexico, Nigeria, Uganda, Vietnam, and
Papua New Guinea indicate that for most women around the world,
marital sex represents their greatest risk for HIV infection. Responding
to the well-documented epidemiological evidence that men's
extramarital sex is a major element of HIV risk for married women,
researchers found that prevention messages that associate infidelity
with immorality simply are not compatible with different cultural
views on marriage.
Specifically,
the NIH-funded study shows that keeping affairs secret and maintaining
financial support for a family is important to men. Men show concern
for their reputation as being responsible and preserving their wives'
dignity by keeping their affairs secret rather than actually abstaining
from extramarital sex. What made them "moral" men was
their continued financial support for their families and an emotional
commitment to their wives.
These findings
demonstrate that conservative public health programs that promote
the narrow "AB" (Abstain-until-marriage and Be-faithful-in-marriage)
and the "ABC" (Abstain, Be faithful, use Condoms) prevention
programs are incompatible with the diverse experiences and moral
reasoning of men. It also shows the misleading—and potentially
counterproductive—effect that the moralizing "ABC"
approach has on actual prevention.
Indeed, "ABC"
programs may be helping to fuel the spread of AIDS because the approach
stigmatizes those who use condoms or those who ask their marriage
partners to use condoms. In "ABC" programs, abstaining
or being faithful in marriage are presented as the most moral choices,
with condoms as a last resort—only to be used if you are sexually
immoral because you failed to choose "A" or "B"
or are part of an "at-risk" population. As a result,
women are discouraged from asking their husbands to use condoms,
because asking them to do so is tantamount to accusing them of infidelity
and implicates them as being immoral. Stigmatizing condoms also
discourages men from using condoms in extramarital sex, because
their use demeans those extramarital relations.
This is why
current U.S. global AIDS funding today is so misguided. In direct
conflict with these recent empirical research findings, 56 percent
of U.S. global AIDS funding for prevention of sexual transmission
of HIV is spent on programs that promote the narrow "AB"
approach. The assumption behind this approach is that regardless
of the social and economic context, abstinence and mutual fidelity
are choices that individuals readily can make. It also assumes a
universal morality that men and women in all cultures value abstinence
and fidelity as morally good.
Neither of these
assumptions is true in practice. Nor are these practices the only
way to stop the sexual transmission of HIV. Public health programs
cannot reduce married women's HIV risk simply by exhorting
men to be faithful. Based on their scientific findings, researchers
recommend a harm-reduction approach to marital risk of HIV in U.S.
global AIDS policy and programming. Their recommendations include:
- Avoid moralistic
approaches to extramarital sex, which exacerbate the stigma of
HIV.
- Associate
condom use with masculinity by building on men's existing
sense of responsibility to their families.
Recognize the
impact of economic migration by including workplace education on
HIV risk and providing family housing in migration sites where possible.
Educate men where they are most likely to engage in extramarital
sex, such as bars and brothels. There is no silver bullet that will
stop the spread of HIV, so it is no surprise that the United States'
one-size-fits-all "ABC" approach is insufficient. While
it is useful and important to create the conditions necessary for
individuals to be able to choose fidelity, the morality of saving
lives must take precedence.
In order to
make real progress on HIV prevention, policy makers in Washington
must be able to put aside their own moral judgments and face the
complexities and realities of an imperfect world. There is an urgent
need today for creative, comprehensive, community-based efforts
that address interconnected factors of gender inequality, masculine
ideals, migrant labor, and leisure time activities to reduce the
risk of HIV infection—not only for married women, but for
all women and men.
Serra Sippel
is Acting Executive Director of the Center for Health and Gender
Equity. Analysis, information and resources about restrictions to
U.S. global AIDS funding can be found at www.pepfarwatch.org
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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