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2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (6) ◽  
pp. 483-494
Author(s):  
Kimberly A. Kisler ◽  
Jesse B. Fletcher ◽  
Anne E. Fehrenbacher ◽  
Cathy J. Reback

Little is known about how HIV risk varies among trans women of different ages. From January 2010 to February 2021, 2,242 trans women were assessed via outreach encounters consisting of health education and risk reduction information, and queries of recent sexual behaviors. Generalized linear models provide adjusted rates of engagement in condomless anal intercourse (CAI), in exchange sex, and CAI with exchange partners in the past 30 days for each year from age 18 to 60. Most participants identified as Hispanic/Latina (52%) and most were HIV negative (80%). Engagement in exchange sex remained prevalent from participants’ early 20s through their mid-40s, though CAI with such partners never exceeded an average estimated prevalence of 15%. Condomless behaviors with non-exchange partners was more common, with at least 20% reporting engagement in non-exchange CAI regardless of age. The need for trans-specific sexual risk reduction interventions that take age into account is underscored.


2021 ◽  
pp. 088626052110358
Author(s):  
Susheel K. Khetarpal ◽  
Nicholas Szoko ◽  
Alison J. Culyba ◽  
Daniel Shaw ◽  
Maya I. Ragavan

Youth violence victimization continues to be pervasive and a significant cause of adolescent mortality. Since their 2014 “Connecting the Dots” report, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have encouraged researchers to identify shared protective factors that prevent multiple forms of youth violence. Parental monitoring, a bidirectional construct encompassing parental knowledge and regulation of their child’s activities with children’s concurrent perception of their parent’s awareness of such activities, could be such a cross-cutting protective factor. In this study, we examined associations between parental monitoring and multiple types of violence victimization among a school-based sample of adolescents. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of an anonymous survey of health risk and protective behaviors completed by students across Pittsburgh Public Schools ( N = 2,426). In separate analyses, we used logistic regression to examine associations between youth-reported parental monitoring and multiple experiences of youth violence victimization, ranging from school- and electronic-based bullying to different forms of sexual and physical violence. We found that many experiences of youth violence victimization were consistent with nationally representative data. In addition, we determined that higher parental monitoring was significantly and inversely associated with all violence victimization outcomes examined (school-based bullying, electronic-based bullying, threatening someone with a weapon, adolescent relationship abuse, sexual assault, and exchange sex) at the p < .05 threshold. Overall, this study is one of the first that examines how parental monitoring relates to multiple forms of youth violence victimization, including exchange sex, which is a critical but less-studied violence experience. This work adds to the growing literature on how parental monitoring may serve as a shared protective factor for multiple forms of violence victimization.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danielle R. Madden ◽  
Sara Semborski ◽  
Eldin Dzubur ◽  
Brian Redline ◽  
Harmony Rhoades ◽  
...  

AbstractThis study investigated HIV risk among homeless and formerly homeless young adults by examining risky sex behaviors (e.g., condomless sex, exchange sex, and sex with multiple persons) using 90-day and daily recall methods. Data came from a sample of young adults (aged 18–27) with current (n = 101) or past (n = 109) homelessness experience in Los Angeles, California, recruited between 2017 and 2019. Baseline surveys queried demographics and sexual history. Daily retrospective surveys queried sexual events. Multiple logistic regressions were used to test the effects of demographic characteristics including homelessness history, relationship status, substance use, and sexual history on risky sex outcomes. In this sample, 26% reported never using a condom during anal or vaginal sex in the past 90 days, 5% reported testing positive for HIV, 82% had limited to no knowledge of preexposure prophylaxis, and 8% reported having had exchange sex during a 7-day measurement period, with those experiencing homelessness more likely to report. The study suggests supportive housing can reduce the occurrence of exchange sex but that HIV prevention services are still needed in homeless and housing programs to promote safe sexual practices.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Rushmore ◽  
K Buchacz ◽  
D Broz ◽  
C Agnew-Brune ◽  
M Johnson Jones ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 166-180
Author(s):  
Étienne Meunier ◽  
Xiang Cai ◽  
Anthony Bamonte ◽  
Denton Callander ◽  
Eric W. Schrimshaw

The practice of sex work or exchange sex (having sex in exchange for money, drugs, shelter, or other things) and the risks for HIV and sexually transmissible infections (STIs) associated with it differ based on the venues where partners meet (e.g., streets, agencies, or the Internet). Although there is evidence that gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) use social media and dating/hookup applications and websites to find exchange sex, little is known about this phenomenon. We used online survey data collected among MSM in New York City recruited through social/sexual networking technologies to learn more about the practice of exchange sex in this population. Overall, 28.8% of participants had ever exchanged (sold) sex, including 8.4% who had done so in the prior three months. Almost half (46.4%) of those who had ever exchanged sex had met their first client through a social/sexual networking app/website (that was not a website dedicated to sex work), and the majority (88%) of those who had exchanged sex in the prior three months had done so with a client met through these technologies. In multivariable analyses, those who had exchanged sex in the prior three months reported at least twice the number of condomless anal sex partners in that period (compared to those who never exchanged sex) after controlling for covariates (incidence-rate ratio [IRR] = 2.08, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.52–2.84). Social/sexual networking technologies are important venues for finding exchange sex among MSM, a practice that may present high risk for HIV and/or STI transmission.


Author(s):  
Akilah Wise ◽  
Behzad Kianian ◽  
Howard Chang ◽  
Sabriya Linton ◽  
Mary E. Wolfe ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Anne E. Fehrenbacher ◽  
Jesse B. Fletcher ◽  
Kirsty A. Clark ◽  
Kimberly A. Kisler ◽  
Cathy J. Reback

LINGUISTICA ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 360
Author(s):  
EKA NOVIYANTI ◽  
AMRIN SARAGIH ◽  
MUHAMMAD NATSIR

This study discussed woman struggle in Paulo Coelho’s The Spy. The objectives were to find out the kinds of woman’s struggle in Novel The Spy, the ways the main character struggles to fulfill her needs, and the reasons why the main character struggle in the way she did. This study used descriptive qualitative method. This study used Maslow (1987) theory to analyze the kinds of woman’s struggle and the ways the main character struggles to fulfill her needs that she had faced and elaborated the reasons by using theory of ambition. The result of this study can be concluded in some aspects. First, the kinds of woman’s struggle found in Novel The Spy in fulfilling the human needs, namely: Struggle for Survival, Struggle to Reach the Dream, Struggle for Love & Relationship, Struggle in Getting A Good Reputation and Struggle to be Independent Woman. Second, the ways the main character struggles to fulfilling her needs are exchange sex with favors and money, making relations with men from the higher classes and to be a Spy. Third, the reasons why the main character struggle are because of her ambition to become a Free Woman and influenced by author’s background.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (9) ◽  
pp. 380-391
Author(s):  
Étienne Meunier ◽  
Karolynn Siegel ◽  
Anne E. Sundelson ◽  
Eric W. Schrimshaw

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