Love with HIV: A Latent Class Analysis of Sexual and Intimate Relationship Experiences Among Women Living with HIV in Canada

被引:0
作者
Allison Carter
Saara Greene
Deborah Money
Margarite Sanchez
Kath Webster
Valerie Nicholson
Lori A. Brotto
Catherine Hankins
Mary Kestler
Neora Pick
Kate Salters
Karène Proulx-Boucher
Nadia O’Brien
Sophie Patterson
Alexandra de Pokomandy
Mona Loutfy
Angela Kaida
机构
[1] Simon Fraser University,Faculty of Health Sciences
[2] British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS,Epidemiology and Population Health
[3] University of New South Wales,Kirby Institute, Faculty of Medicine
[4] McMaster University,School of Social Work
[5] University of British Columbia,Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Faculty of Medicine
[6] University of British Columbia,Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine
[7] Positive Living Society of British Columbia,ViVA
[8] University of Amsterdam,Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development (AIGHD), Department of Global Health
[9] McGill University,Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health, Faculty of Medicine
[10] University of British Columbia,Division of Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine
[11] British Columbia Women’s Hospital and Health Centre,Oak Tree Clinic
[12] McGill University Health Centre,Chronic Viral Illness Service
[13] McGill University,Department of Family Medicine
[14] University of Liverpool,Department of Public Health and Policy
[15] Women’s College Hospital,Women’s College Research Institute
[16] University of Toronto,Department of Medicine
来源
Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2019年 / 48卷
关键词
Love; Sex; Relationships; Power; Feminism; Women; HIV;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Love remains hidden in HIV research in favor of a focus on risk. Among 1424 women living with HIV in Canada, we explored (1) whether eight facets of sex and intimacy (marital status, sexual activity, physical intimacy, emotional closeness, power equity, sexual exclusivity, relationship duration, and couple HIV serostatus) may coalesce into distinct relationship types, and (2) how these relationship types may be linked to love as well as various social, psychological, and structural factors. Five latent classes were identified: no relationship (46.5%), relationships without sex (8.6%), and three types of sexual relationships—short term (15.4%), long term/unhappy (6.4%), and long term/happy (23.2%, characterized by equitable power, high levels of physical and emotional closeness, and mainly HIV-negative partners). While women in long-term/happy relationships were most likely to report feeling love for and wanted by someone “all of the time,” love was not exclusive to sexual or romantic partners and a sizeable proportion of women reported affection across latent classes. Factors independently associated with latent class membership included age, children living at home, sexism/genderism, income, sex work, violence, trauma, depression, HIV treatment, awareness of treatment’s prevention benefits, and HIV-related stigma. Findings reveal the diversity of women’s experiences with respect to love, sex, and relationships and draw attention to the sociostructural factors shaping intimate partnering in the context of HIV. A nuanced focus on promoting healthy relationships and supportive social environments may offer a more comprehensive approach to supporting women’s overall sexual health and well-being than programs focused solely on sexual risk reduction.
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页码:1015 / 1040
页数:25
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