Socio-cultural and Economic Antecedents of Adolescent Sexual Decision-Making and HIV-Risk in Rural Uganda
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Date
2013-02Author
Katz, Ingrid T.
Ybarra, Michele L.
Wyatt, Monique A.
Kiwanuka, Julius P.
Bangsberg, David R.
Ware, Norma C.
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With more than half of new infections occurring among youth, HIV/AIDS remains a major contributor to morbidity and mortality in Uganda. Semi-structured interviews were performed with 48 adolescents and 15 adult key informants in a rural Ugandan community to identify influences on adolescent sexual decision-making. Inductive data analytic methods revealed five thematic influences: 1) social pressure, 2) decline of the Senga (a familiar figure who traditionally taught female adolescents about how to run a household), 3) cultural barriers to condom use, 4) knowledge of HIV transmission and modes of prevention, and 5) a moral injunction against sex before marriage. Influences were classified as HIV/AIDS risk and protective factors and organized
to form an explanatory framework of adolescent sexual risk-taking. Risk factors pull youth toward
risky behavior, while protective factors push them away. Predominance of risk over protective influences explains persistent sexual risk-taking by Ugandan youth. HIV prevention programs designed for Ugandan adolescents should take competing factors and socio-cultural and economic
influences into account
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