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Condom
promotion will have more impact than discouraging 'sugar daddies,'
study shows
Keith Alcorn, AIDS Map
August 28, 2007
http://www.aidsmap.com/en/news/03323C3B-A098-4D69-A7F9-7885F590762A.asp
Without better uptake
of condoms among older men, the promotion of later sexual debut
and discouragement of cross-generational sexual partnerships may
do little to limit the spread of HIV in African countries, according
to epidemiological modelling carried out by researchers from Imperial
College, London.
Using data from an extensive
study in Manicaland, Zimbabwe, Timothy Hallett and colleagues constructed
a mathematical model to demonstrate the effect of different behavioural
changes on HIV prevalence over time.
The original cross-sectional
study interviewed around 10,000 men and women face-to-face in the
rural province of Manicaland between 1998 and 2000, with a follow-up
survey after three years. In three-quarters of interviews with literate
respondents, the answers to sensitive questions about sexual behaviour
were recorded using a confidential voting method.
The results were used
as the basis for sexual behaviour frequencies in the model (for
example, condom use at the last sexual act was reported by 17% of
males and 8% of women). For the purposes of the model individuals
in a hypothetical population were divided according to lower or
higher sexual activity, and according to whether they formed partnerships
with people with a similar level of sexual activity or not.
They were also divided
according to whether they formed partnerships with people in a similar
age group, or with people older or younger than themselves. Cross-generational
partnerships were not rigidly defined in terms of age, and the age
differences could be manipulated in the model.
Their simulations in
the model showed that as the proportion of cross-generational partnerships
rose above 10%, adult (15-49) HIV prevalence began to increase sharply,
and if 40% of partnerships were cross-generational, HIV prevalence
reached 15% and the ratio of female to male infections in the population
reached 8:1.
The model also showed
that if the proportion of cross-generational partnerships was reduced
from 20% to 5% over 20 years, HIV prevalence in males aged 15-24
would fall slightly by year 20 (by 0.5%) but substantially among
young women aged 15-24 (from 10% to 7% if replaced by partners of
the same age, and from 10% to 5% if not replaced by new partners).
The lifetime risk of
HIV infection was reduced by 10% for women and 5% for men if cross-generational
partnerships were reduced and replaced by peer partnerships.
If cross-generational
partnerships were eliminated and not replaced by peer partners (a
partner reduction strategy, but note that cross-generational partnerships
only account for a proportion of an individual's partners),
the lifetime risk of HIV infection would be reduced by 25% for women
and 22% for men.
In comparison delaying
sexual debut by two years had a modest effect, resulting in a reduction
in lifetime risk of around 8%.
"Although abstinence
undeniably reduces the risk of infection, its impact on the spread
of HIV and the average chance of infection over a lifetime is small,"
the authors say.
However, the intervention
that had the greatest impact was increasing condom use in older
men (over 25 years) to the levels reported by 15-24 year old males.
This resulted in a 20% reduction in the lifetime risk of infection
for both men and women. In comparison, doubling condom use across
the whole population would have a lesser impact for women, resulting
in a 15% reduction in the lifetime risk of infection.
"The real impact
of cross-generational sex on the population-level spread of HIV
is the power imbalance in those partnerships and the implications
this has for the chance that condoms will be used," the authors
conclude.
In sub-Saharan Africa
much concern has been expressed about the epidemiological effect
of cross-generational sexual relationships. In particular, women
involved in HIV prevention in some countries have argued for a need
to target `sugar daddies`: men who are older, have more money and
who seek sex with younger women.
At the recent South African
AIDS Conference Dr Olive Shisana of the South African Human Sciences
Research Council told the conference that the three Cs - cars, cash
and cellphones - were the currency traded during cross-generational
relationships in South Africa, and other researchers agree that
corss-generational sex needs to be seen as an econcomic survival
strategy for young women.
But the Imperial College
researchers say their results show that specific targeting of cross-generational
sex will not produce the desired impact on HIV prevalence.
"Our results show
that behaviour change interventions should aim to minimise unprotected
sexual contact by young women with anyone and should not target
the age difference between sexual partners per se . . . interventions
should not be narrowly targeted at particular at-risk groups but
instead should tackle risky behaviour throughout the sexual network."
Reference
Hallett TB et
al. Behaviour change in generalised HIV epidemics: impact of reducing
cross-generational sex and delaying age at sexual debut. Sex Transm
Infect 83 (suppl 1): i50-i54, 2007.
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