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Measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men South Africa: Implications for gender-transformative programming

INTRODUCTION: Measures used to assess equitable relationship dynamics, including the sexual relationship power scale (SRPS) have previously been associated with lower HIV-risk among young women, and reduced perpetration of intimate partner violence among men. However, few studies describe how the SR...

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Autores principales: Closson, Kalysha, Dietrich, Janan J., Beksinska, Mags, Gibbs, Andrew, Hornschuh, Stefanie, Smith, Tricia, Smit, Jenni, Gray, Glenda, Ndung’u, Thumbi, Brockman, Mark, Kaida, Angela
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6760831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31553723
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221554
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author Closson, Kalysha
Dietrich, Janan J.
Beksinska, Mags
Gibbs, Andrew
Hornschuh, Stefanie
Smith, Tricia
Smit, Jenni
Gray, Glenda
Ndung’u, Thumbi
Brockman, Mark
Kaida, Angela
author_facet Closson, Kalysha
Dietrich, Janan J.
Beksinska, Mags
Gibbs, Andrew
Hornschuh, Stefanie
Smith, Tricia
Smit, Jenni
Gray, Glenda
Ndung’u, Thumbi
Brockman, Mark
Kaida, Angela
author_sort Closson, Kalysha
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Measures used to assess equitable relationship dynamics, including the sexual relationship power scale (SRPS) have previously been associated with lower HIV-risk among young women, and reduced perpetration of intimate partner violence among men. However, few studies describe how the SRPS has been adapted and validated for use within global youth sexual health studies. We examined gender-specific psychometric properties, reliability, and validity of a SRPS used within a South African youth-engaged cohort study. METHODS: Young men and women (16–24 years) enrolled in community-based cohorts in Durban and Soweto (2014–2016) reporting a primary partner at 6-month follow-up completed a 13-item (strongly agree/agree/disagree/strongly disagree) South African adaptation of Pulerwitz’s SRPS (range 13–52, higher scores indicating greater sexual relationship power [SRP] equity). SRPS modifications were made using gender-specific exploratory factor analyses (EFAs), removing items with factor loadings <0.3. Cronbach alphas were conducted for full and modified scales by gender. Using modified scales, unadjusted and adjusted regression models examined associations between 1. relevant socio-demographic and relationship determinants and SRP equity, and 2. SRP equity and sexual relationship related outcomes. All models adjusted for education, age, site, and current employment. RESULTS: 235 sexually-active youth (66% women, median age = 20) were included. Mean scores across all 13 scale items were 2.71 (SD 0.30) for women and 2.70 (SD 0.4) for men. Scale Cronbach’s alphas were 0.63 for women and 0.64 for men. EFAs resulted in two gender-specific single-factor SRPS. Modified SRPS Cronbach alphas increased to 0.67 for women (8-items) and 0.70 for men (9-items). After adjusting for age, site and current employment, higher education remained associated with SRP equity across genders. In adjusted models, correlates of SRP equity included primary partnerships that were age-similar (<5 years older) and <2 years in length for women and living in Soweto and younger age for men. Greater SRP equity among women was also independently associated with no recent partner violence. CONCLUSIONS: Results highlight important gender differences in SRP equity measures and associations, highlighting the critically need for future research to examine gendered constructions of SRP equity in order to accurately develop, validate and use appropriate measures within quantitative surveys.
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spelling pubmed-67608312019-10-04 Measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men South Africa: Implications for gender-transformative programming Closson, Kalysha Dietrich, Janan J. Beksinska, Mags Gibbs, Andrew Hornschuh, Stefanie Smith, Tricia Smit, Jenni Gray, Glenda Ndung’u, Thumbi Brockman, Mark Kaida, Angela PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Measures used to assess equitable relationship dynamics, including the sexual relationship power scale (SRPS) have previously been associated with lower HIV-risk among young women, and reduced perpetration of intimate partner violence among men. However, few studies describe how the SRPS has been adapted and validated for use within global youth sexual health studies. We examined gender-specific psychometric properties, reliability, and validity of a SRPS used within a South African youth-engaged cohort study. METHODS: Young men and women (16–24 years) enrolled in community-based cohorts in Durban and Soweto (2014–2016) reporting a primary partner at 6-month follow-up completed a 13-item (strongly agree/agree/disagree/strongly disagree) South African adaptation of Pulerwitz’s SRPS (range 13–52, higher scores indicating greater sexual relationship power [SRP] equity). SRPS modifications were made using gender-specific exploratory factor analyses (EFAs), removing items with factor loadings <0.3. Cronbach alphas were conducted for full and modified scales by gender. Using modified scales, unadjusted and adjusted regression models examined associations between 1. relevant socio-demographic and relationship determinants and SRP equity, and 2. SRP equity and sexual relationship related outcomes. All models adjusted for education, age, site, and current employment. RESULTS: 235 sexually-active youth (66% women, median age = 20) were included. Mean scores across all 13 scale items were 2.71 (SD 0.30) for women and 2.70 (SD 0.4) for men. Scale Cronbach’s alphas were 0.63 for women and 0.64 for men. EFAs resulted in two gender-specific single-factor SRPS. Modified SRPS Cronbach alphas increased to 0.67 for women (8-items) and 0.70 for men (9-items). After adjusting for age, site and current employment, higher education remained associated with SRP equity across genders. In adjusted models, correlates of SRP equity included primary partnerships that were age-similar (<5 years older) and <2 years in length for women and living in Soweto and younger age for men. Greater SRP equity among women was also independently associated with no recent partner violence. CONCLUSIONS: Results highlight important gender differences in SRP equity measures and associations, highlighting the critically need for future research to examine gendered constructions of SRP equity in order to accurately develop, validate and use appropriate measures within quantitative surveys. Public Library of Science 2019-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6760831/ /pubmed/31553723 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221554 Text en © 2019 Closson et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Closson, Kalysha
Dietrich, Janan J.
Beksinska, Mags
Gibbs, Andrew
Hornschuh, Stefanie
Smith, Tricia
Smit, Jenni
Gray, Glenda
Ndung’u, Thumbi
Brockman, Mark
Kaida, Angela
Measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men South Africa: Implications for gender-transformative programming
title Measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men South Africa: Implications for gender-transformative programming
title_full Measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men South Africa: Implications for gender-transformative programming
title_fullStr Measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men South Africa: Implications for gender-transformative programming
title_full_unstemmed Measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men South Africa: Implications for gender-transformative programming
title_short Measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men South Africa: Implications for gender-transformative programming
title_sort measuring sexual relationship power equity among young women and young men south africa: implications for gender-transformative programming
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6760831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31553723
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221554
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