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2981por Nungu, Saumu Iddy, Mghamba, Janneth Maridadi, Rumisha, Susan Fred, Semali, Innocent Antony“…Education level, employment status, having ≥4 ANC visits, reporting sexually-transmitted infections, condom use, and good perception of HIV tests were significant factors increased uptake for re-testing. …”
Publicado 2019
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2982por Twahirwa Rwema, Jean Olivier, Baral, Stefan, Ketende, Sosthenes, Phaswana-Mafuya, Nancy, Lambert, Andrew, Kose, Zamakayise, Mcingana, Mfezi, Rao, Amrita, Hausler, Harry, Schwartz, Sheree“…In Prongs 1 and 2, gaps of 42% in consistent condom use with clients among HIV-negative FSW and 43% in long-term high efficacy contraceptive method use among HIV-positive FSW were observed. …”
Publicado 2019
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2983por Khawcharoenporn, Thana, Mongkolkaewsub, Suteera, Naijitra, Chanon, Khonphiern, Worawoot, Apisarnthanarak, Anucha, Phanuphak, Nittaya“…Comparing to other MSM, youth MSM had significantly higher median number of lifetime sexual partners [2 (IQR 1–9) vs. 1 (IQR 0–1); P < 0.001), were more-likely to ever exchange sex for money (44% vs. 9%; P < 0.001) and have sexual partner who exchanged sex for money (8% vs. 1%; P < 0.001). Rates of consistent condom use in the past 3 months for anal, oral and vaginal sexes were low and not significantly different between youth and other MSM (51% vs. 61%, 26% vs. 35% and 72% vs. 61%, respectively). …”
Publicado 2019
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2984por Gafos, Mitzy, Horne, Rob, Nutland, Will, Bell, Gill, Rae, Caroline, Wayal, Sonali, Rayment, Michael, Clarke, Amanda, Schembri, Gabriel, Gilson, Richard, McOwan, Alan, Sullivan, Ann, Fox, Julie, Apea, Vanessa, Dewsnap, Claire, Dolling, David, White, Ellen, Brodnicki, Elizabeth, Wood, Gemma, Dunn, David, McCormack, Sheena“…Participants described the risk behaviour and management strategies before using PrEP, which included irregular condom use, sero-sorting, and strategic positioning. …”
Publicado 2018
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2985“…MSM accepting PrEP were more concerned about their partners’ HIV status (P=.002), history of sexually transmitted infections (P=.01), condom use (P=.02), and HIV testing behavior (P=.02). …”
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2986por Zucker, Jason, Theodore, Deborah, Carnevale, Caroline, LaSota, Elijah, Richards, Paul, Gordon, Peter, Cohall, Alwyn, Sobieszczyk, Magdalena“…For those stopping due to lower perceived risk, 40% were in a monogamous relationship, 60% were less sexually active, and 20% always used a condom or did not engage in receptive anal intercourse. 56% of patients had at least 1 major life event in the preceding 3 months, including loss of a job (25%), breakup with a partner (12%), illness or death of a family member (11%), or unstable housing (8%). 47% used drugs or alcohol before sex in the past month including 39% not on PrEP. …”
Publicado 2019
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2987por Kounta, Cheick Haïballa, Sagaon-Teyssier, Luis, Coulaud, Pierre-Julien, Mora, Marion, Maradan, Gwenaelle, Bourrelly, Michel, Keita, Abdoul Aziz, Yoro, Stéphane-Alain Babo, Anoma, Camille, Coulibaly, Christian, Dah, Elias Ter Tiero, Agbomadji, Selom, Mensah, Ephrem, Bernier, Adeline, Couderc, Clotilde, Dembélé Keita, Bintou, Laurent, Christian, Spire, Bruno“…The following variables, regarding the previous 6 months, were positively associated with TS: being younger (aOR[95%CI]:1.86[1.39–2.50]), less educated (aOR[95%CI]:1.49[1.09–2.03]), unmarried status (aOR[95%CI]:1.79[1.10–2.93]), satisfaction with current sex life (aOR[95%CI]:1.41[1.06–1.88]), group sex with men (aOR[95%CI]:2.07[1.46–2.94]), multiple male sexual partners (aOR[95%CI]:1.85[1.40–2.44]), receptive or versatile anal sex with male partners (aOR [95%CI]:1.48[1.12–1.96]), giving benefits in exchange for sex with a man (aOR[95%CI]:2.80[1.97–3.98]), alcohol consumption (aOR[95%CI]:1.44[1.08–1.93]) and drug use (aOR[95%CI]:1.82[1.24–2.68]) during sex, and finally experiencing stigmatization (aOR [95%CI]:1.15[1.07–1.25]). Condom use during anal sex (aOR[95%CI]:0.73[0.53–0.99]) was negatively associated with TS.…”
Publicado 2019
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2988por Dong, Meng-Jie, Peng, Bin, Liu, Zhen-Feng, Ye, Qian-ni, Liu, Hao, Lu, Xi-Li, Zhang, Bo, Chen, Jia-Jia“…Compared to participants who sometimes or always used condoms, participants who had never used a condom in the past 6 months had a higher risk of HIV infection, with odds ratios of 0.1 (95%CI: 0.08-0.14). …”
Publicado 2019
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2989por Soudeyns, Camille, Speybroeck, Niko, Brisson, Marc, Mossong, Joël, Latsuzbaia, Ardashel“…HPV vaccination was not associated with unsafe sexual behaviour such as shorter relationship duration with current or last sexual partner (odds ratio (OR) = 1.05, 95% CI [0.94–1.16]), younger age of sexual debut (OR = 1.00, 95% CI [0.88–1.14]), increased number of lifetime sexual partners (OR = 0.95, 95% CI [0.87–1.03), higher age difference with sexual partner (OR = 1.01, 95% CI [0.95–1.08]), condom use (OR = 0.97, 95% CI [0.60–1.56]), nor with other factors like smoking (OR = 0.73, 95% CI [0.47–1.15]) and nationality. …”
Publicado 2020
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2990por Cao, Wangnan, Sun, Shengzhi, Peng, Liping, Gu, Jing, Hao, Chun, Li, Jibin, Wei, Dannuo, Gilmour, Stuart, Li, Jinghua“…We found that PrEP awareness (unadjusted odds ratio (ORu) = 1.41; 95% CI: 1.01–1.97), acceptability (ORu =1.20; 95% CI: 1.07–1.34), perceived PrEP adherence (ORu =1.23; 95% CI: 1.08–1.41), and perceived PrEP benefit in reducing condom use (ORu =1.29; 95% CI: 1.07–1.55) were all associated with participants’ willingness to pay the market rate for PrEP. …”
Publicado 2020
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2991“…Of these men, 13.3% had ever tested for HIV and 58.9% reported condom use at their last sexual encounter with a brothel-based female sex worker. …”
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2992por Dengo-Baloi, Liliana, Boothe, Makini, Semá Baltazar, Cynthia, Sathane, Isabel, Langa, Denise Chitsondzo, Condula, Manuel, Ricardo, Helena, Inguane, Celso, Teodoro, Eugénia, Gouveia, Lídia, Raymond, Henry F., Horth, Roberta“…Respondents reported that PWID engage in high-risk behaviors such as needle and syringe sharing, exchange of sex for drugs or money, and low condom use. According to participants, PWID would rather rent, share or borrow injection equipment at shooting galleries than purchase them due to stigma, fear of criminalization, transportation and purchase costs, restricted pharmacy hours, personal preference for needle sharing, and immediacy of drug need. …”
Publicado 2020
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2993“…CONCLUSIONS: The study concludes that early sexual debut, lower prevalence of condom use at first sexual experience, tendency of live-in-relationship, and alcohol consumption indicate the hazardous interconnection between such behaviours among adolescent boys over the last decade which placed them at higher-risky sexual behaviour as compared to young men. …”
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2994por Naicker, Cherise L., Mansoor, Leila E., Dawood, Halima, Naidoo, Kogieleum, Singo, Denzhe, Matten, David, Williamson, Carolyn, Abdool Karim, Quarraisha“…PrEP could fill an important HIV prevention gap, especially for sexually active young women who are limited in their ability to negotiate mutual monogamy or condom use. As PrEP is scaled up in high HIV incidence settings, it is crucial to consider the importance of early identification of HIV infection during PrEP use, to allow for rapid discontinuation of PrEP to reduce the risk of antiretroviral (ARV) resistance. …”
Publicado 2020
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2995por Vandormael, Alain, Cuadros, Diego, Dobra, Adrian, Bärnighausen, Till, Tanser, Frank“…We observed similar reductions in male and female HIV incidence conditional on condom-use, marital status, urban residential status, migration history, and the HIV prevalence in the surrounding community. …”
Publicado 2020
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2996por Martin, Philippe, Cousin, Lorraine, Gottot, Serge, Bourmaud, Aurelie, de La Rochebrochard, Elise, Alberti, Corinne“…Among the outcomes (evaluated or planned for evaluation), sexual behaviors are the most evaluated (n=14), followed by condom use (n=11), and sexual health knowledge (n=8). …”
Publicado 2020
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2997por Jewell, Britta L, Mudimu, Edinah, Stover, John, ten Brink, Debra, Phillips, Andrew N, Smith, Jennifer A, Martin-Hughes, Rowan, Teng, Yu, Glaubius, Robert, Mahiane, Severin Guy, Bansi-Matharu, Loveleen, Taramusi, Isaac, Chagoma, Newton, Morrison, Michelle, Doherty, Meg, Marsh, Kimberly, Bershteyn, Anna, Hallett, Timothy B, Kelly, Sherrie L“…Although an interruption in the supply of ART drugs would have the largest impact of any potential disruptions, effects of poorer clinical care due to overstretched health facilities, interruptions of supply of other drugs such as co-trimoxazole, and suspension of HIV testing would all have a substantial effect on population-level mortality (up to a 1·06 times increase in HIV-related deaths over a 1-year period due to disruptions affecting 50% of the population compared with no disruption). Interruption to condom supplies and peer education would make populations more susceptible to increases in HIV incidence, although physical distancing measures could lead to reductions in risky sexual behaviour (up to 1·19 times increase in new HIV infections over a 1-year period if 50% of people are affected). …”
Publicado 2020
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2998por Wechsberg, Wendee M., Browne, Felicia A., Ndirangu, Jacqueline, Bonner, Courtney Peasant, Minnis, Alexandra M., Nyblade, Laura, Speizer, Ilene S., Howard, Brittni N., Myers, Bronwyn, Ahmed, Khatija“…The Young Women’s Health CoOp addresses substance use, sexual risk, violence prevention and sexual negotiation, condom demonstration, and problem solving with the following additions: knowledge of PrEP, the importance of PrEP adherence, and sexual and reproductive health. …”
Publicado 2020
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2999por Bhattacharjee, Parinita, Ma, Huiting, Musyoki, Helgar, Cheuk, Eve, Isac, Shajy, Njiraini, Margaret, Gichangi, Peter, Mishra, Sharmistha, Becker, Marissa, Pickles, Michael“…In the most recent episode of violence when sex took place levels of condom use remained low at 53–61%. The main perpetrators of violence were intimate partners for YCS, and both intimate partners and regular non-client partners for YTS. …”
Publicado 2020
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3000por Faini, Diana, Munseri, Patricia, Bakari, Muhammad, Sandström, Eric, Faxelid, Elisabeth, Hanson, Claudia“…CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrate that FSWs face barriers to initiating and adhering to contraceptive use because of sex work stigma, inability to negotiate condoms and failure to access medical services at their convenience. …”
Publicado 2020
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