Forty six percent of African-American adolescent girls report that their partner did not use a condom the last time they had sex, says a University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing study.
HIV infection resulting from partner abuse seem to haunt the black women most, according to a new study at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. In the study as many as 46 per cent of African-American adolescent girls said they were too intimidated to press their partners to use condoms.
The relationship between HIV and partner abuse is significant: In the U.S., at least 12 percent of HIV infections among women are a result of partner abuse.
Getting out of an abusive relationship should be considered an HIV prevention strategy, according to Anne M. Teitelman, assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, who published the study in the journal “Advances in Nursing Science.” Dr. Teitelman and her co-authors advocate the need for novel strategies to increase condom use among adolescents. The co-authors are Julie Tennille, MSW, LSW; Julia M. Bobinski, BSN, MS; Loretta S. Jemmott, PhD, RN, FAAN; and John B. Jemmott III, PhD.
“Promoting healthy relationships among youth and preventing partner abuse in adolescent relationships should become a public health priority,” writes Dr. Teitelman. “This is necessary for primary prevention of the intersecting epidemics of partner abuse and HIV/STIs [sexually transmitted infections].”
The study of 64 African-American adolescent girls, aged 14 to 17, illuminates the pressure a male partner may exercise to encourage girls to forgo condom use. Understanding the practice, which the authors term “condom coercion,” can inform more tailored prevention methods and interventions for adolescent girls at high risk for HIV and STIs, the authors report. Forms of condom coercion include physical and sexual abuse and threats, emotional manipulation, and condom sabotage, as when a male partner surreptitiously removes a condom
Of the sample, 59 percent of girls experienced partner abuse that was physical, verbal, or threatening. Nearly 30 percent reported having unwanted vaginal sex and about 9 percent reported having unwanted anal sex. More than half the girls indicated they had experienced vaginal sex without a condom when they wanted their partner to use one.
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This comment addresses the issue of “silencing condom negotiation,” which the authors define as girls’ reluctance to voice an interest in condom use at the risk of losing the relationship or facing other negative consequences.
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Dr. Teitelman and colleagues are developing a clinic-centered intervention for girls based on their findings.
Source-Medindia