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  1. 2581
    “…Data indicated that over a third (38.8%, n = 725) who were not using a method at baseline described themselves as consistent condom users. Although a major focus of the project was on PrEP service provision, all women were counseled and offered contraceptive services. …”
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  2. 2582
    “…Clients of sex workers form a key population for acquisition of STIs, due to their sexual relations, with or without a condom, with sex workers. STI testing uptake is low among clients of sex workers, and prevalence of STIs remains to be investigated in Belgium. …”
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  3. 2583
    “…In total, 60.96% of males and 29.42% of females accepted premarital sex, 15.49% of males and 6.18% of females reported being sexually experienced, and only 57.18% of the students used condoms every time they had sex. The percentage of condom use among students who were aware of HIV/AIDS knowledge was higher than that among students who were not aware. …”
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  4. 2584
    “…During the most recent survey males resulted more frequently involved in most of the HRBs, while females more frequently reported physical inactivity, regular smoking and not using a condom. Female participation in smoking and alcohol abuse behaviors, fruit and vegetables consumption, and bullying worsened over the study period. …”
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  5. 2585
  6. 2586
    “…The incidence seemed to be associated with the sex work practice conditions: higher incidence among FSW whose usual price was less than 3.50$ (4.3% vs.1.0%), FSW who had a larger number of clients on the last day of work (6.1% in those with 7 clients or more vs. 1.8%), FSW who reported not always using condoms with their clients (8.5% vs. 1.5%) and FSW who reported agreeing to sex without a condom in exchange for a large sum of money (10.1% vs. 1.2%). …”
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  7. 2587
    “…Transactional sex is also associated with HIV risk behaviours, such as multiple sexual partners and other determinants of HIV risk, including partner violence and abuse, alcohol consumption and inconsistent condom use. METHODS: We use data from a mixed‐method, cluster randomised controlled trial of the Ujana Salama cash “plus” intervention in rural Tanzania. …”
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  8. 2588
    “…CONCLUSION: Open sexual attitudes, seeking temporary sexual partners through the Internet, high awareness of HIV infection risk, and low condom use are associated factors for male college students engaging in commercial sex behavior. …”
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  9. 2589
    “…Approximately 20% reported that they would not refuse to have sex if their partner did not want to use condoms. These findings showed risky behavior among the participants, and shows that the level of awareness about the risk of contracting STIs is still poor. …”
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  10. 2590
  11. 2591
    “…The FTM's perceived ability to ask her husband/male partner to use a condom was a negative predictor of LARC use. DISCUSSION: Given limited resources, expanding community-based contraceptive counseling and distribution through trained nursing students may expand family planning access and informed choice among first-time mothers.…”
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  12. 2592
  13. 2593
  14. 2594
    “…MSM and TGH who had partners from virtual space were significantly more likely to report ‘missed a condom at least once during penetrative sex in the past one week’ (17% vs 12%; p<0.001). …”
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  15. 2595
    “…We surveyed 479 participants, who had two or more sexual partners with inconsistent or no condom use. We carried out modified Poisson regression analysis to determine factors associated with willingness to take PrEP.Of 479 high-risk ABYM, 86.4% (n = 414) were willing to take PrEP. …”
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  16. 2596
    “…AGYW with lower SRPS were more likely to not know their partner's HIV status (aOR 2.05, 95% CI: 1.27 to 3.33, p < 0.01), but SRPS was not associated with PrEP persistence, STI infection, condom, or hormonal contraception use. DISCUSSION: AGYW's reasons for initiating PrEP and reasons for continuously using PrEP may be different. …”
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  17. 2597
    “…N. gonorrhoeae had shown statistically significant association with HIV positive, previous history of STIs, shisha users, Khat (Catha edulis) users, condom non-users and having more than two sexual partners. …”
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  18. 2598
    “…Provision of antenatal care, rapid testing for HIV/STI, condom distribution, and care for victims of sexual violence would significantly reduce adverse SRH outcomes and improve the well-being of migrant people, even when in transit.…”
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  19. 2599
    “…RESULTS: Five themes emerged, informing the conceptualization of a Life Course Health Development Model of HIV Vulnerabilities and Resiliencies: (1) interpersonal contexts (family, school, partners, sexual debut, trans mothers); (2) structural vulnerabilities (poverty, educational constraints, migration, hostile environments, sex work, police violence); (3) concomitant mental health and psychosocial factors (discrimination, violence, depression, suicidality, substance use, life hopes/dreams/future expectations); (4) gender affirmation processes (gender identity development, hormones, surgery, legal name/gender marker change); (5) HIV prevention and treatment barriers (PrEP uptake, HIV care, condom use, risk reduction). CONCLUSIONS: Young TW experience formidable developmental challenges associated with transphobia, violence, and pre-maturely facing accelerated milestones. …”
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  20. 2600
    “…Compared to the control group, a significantly higher proportion of students in the intervention groups considered the condom to be the safest protection method (76.2%; 90.9%; 81.0% respectively) and fewer considered the same for contraceptives (21.6%; 7.7%; 16.8%). …”
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