Negotiating Safer Sex Among Married Women in Ghana

被引:0
作者
Eric Y. Tenkorang
机构
[1] Memorial University of Newfoundland,Department of Sociology
来源
Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2012年 / 41卷
关键词
Ghana; Women; HIV risks; Empowerment; Self-efficacy;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent evidence across sub-Saharan Africa shows married women face heightened risks of contracting HIV compared to the never-married. Vulnerability of married women to HIV infection is linked to a number of factors including their inability to negotiate safer sex, inter alia, asking their husbands to use condoms or refusing sexual intercourse even in high risk situations. This study examined what influences married women’s ability to say they can ask their sexual partners to use condoms or refuse sexual intercourse. Demographic and Health Survey data from 2,950 married women were analyzed using complementary log–log models. Married women in Ghana were more likely to say they can ask their husbands to use condoms when they know condoms can protect against HIV transmission and had been tested for their HIV serostatus. Also, women who know sexual abstinence can protect against HIV transmission were more likely to say they can refuse sex. Wealthier and highly educated women were more likely to say they can refuse to have sex with their husbands or ask them to use condoms, compared to poorer and less educated women. It is recommended that policy makers promote specific knowledge related to HIV prevention (condom use, HIV testing), while improving the social and economic circumstances of married women in Ghana.
引用
收藏
页码:1353 / 1362
页数:9
相关论文
共 86 条
[1]  
Asante KO(2010)Cultural adaptation of the Condom Use Self Efficacy scale (CUSES) in Ghana BMC Public Health 10 1471-2458
[2]  
Doku PN(2003)The low acceptability and use of condoms within marriage: Evidence from Nakuru district, Kenya African Population Studies 18 52-65
[3]  
Bauni EK(2003)“Moving” and marrying: Modeling HIV infection among newly-weds in Malawi Demographic Research 1 208-244
[4]  
Jarabi BO(2000)Who decides? Women’s status and negotiations of sex in Uganda Culture, Health and Sexuality 2 303-322
[5]  
Bracher M(2006)Protecting young women from HIV/AIDS: The case against child and adolescent marriage International Family Planning Perspectives 32 79-88
[6]  
Santow G(2007)Sero-discordant couples in five African countries: Implications for prevention strategies Population and Development Review 33 501-523
[7]  
Watkins SC(2008)New heterosexually transmitted HIV infections in married or cohabiting couples in urban Zambia and Rwanda: An analysis of survey and clinical data Lancet 371 2183-2191
[8]  
Brent W(2000)Multilevel modeling for binary data Annual Review of Sociology 26 441-462
[9]  
Blanc AK(2008)Denominational affiliation and fertility behaviour in an African context: An examination of couple data from Ghana Journal of Biosocial Science 40 445-458
[10]  
Gage AJ(2010)Religion, HIV/AIDS and sexual risk-taking among men in Ghana Journal of Biosocial Science 42 531-547