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“Dying a hero”: parents’ and young people’s discourses on concurrent sexual partnerships in rural Tanzania

机译:“死于英雄”:父母和年轻人关于坦桑尼亚农村同时性伴侣的论述

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Background Concurrent sexual partnerships (CSPs) have been speculated to drive the HIV pandemic in many sub-Saharan African countries. We have limited understanding of how people think and talk about CSPs, how beliefs are transmitted across generations, and how this might affect the practice. This paper explores these issues to understand how CSPs are perpetuated and help identify opportunities for interventions to modify them. Methods The study employed an ethnographic research design involving: participant observation in 10 households, 60 in-depth interviews (IDIs), and nine participatory focus group discussions (FGDs). Participants were young people aged 14-24 and parents/carers of young people within this age group. The 60 IDIs were conducted with: 17 fathers, 13 mothers, 13 young men and 17 young women (six of whom had had unplanned pregnancies and 11 had no children). The nine FGDs were conducted with groups of: fathers (2), mothers (2), young women (2), and young men (3). A discourse analysis was carried out with all the transcripts. Data were analysed with the aid of NVIVO 8 software. Results Six distinct discourses were identified from the way participants talked about CSPs and the norms driving the practice: 1) predatory masculine sexuality; 2) masculine respectability; 3) feminine respectability; 4) empowered modern women; 5) traditional health beliefs; 6) public health. Discourses legitimating CSPs were drawn on and reproduced primarily by young people and the media and only indirectly by parents. Discourses discouraging CSPs were used primarily by parents, religious leaders and learning institutions and only indirectly by young people themselves. Conclusion Better knowledge of the discourses through which young people CSPs, and how these discourses are transmitted across generations, might help develop “culturally compelling” interventions that modify these discourses to enhance sexual health.
机译:背景技术据推测,在许多撒哈拉以南非洲国家,并发性伙伴关系(CSP)会导致艾滋病毒大流行。我们对人们如何思考和谈论CSP,信仰如何在几代人之间传播以及如何影响实践的了解有限。本文探讨了这些问题,以了解CSP如何得以延续,并帮助找出干预措施以对其进行修改。方法该研究采用人种志研究设计,涉及:10个家庭的参与者观察,60次深入访谈(IDI)和9个参与性焦点小组讨论(FGD)。参加者为14-24岁的年轻人以及该年龄段的年轻人的父母/照顾者。进行了60次IDI的调查:17位父亲,13位母亲,13位年轻男子和17位年轻妇女(其中6人意外怀孕,11人没有孩子)。这9个烟气脱硫装置由以下组组成:父亲(2),母亲(2),年轻女性(2)和年轻男性(3)。对所有成绩单进行了话语分析。借助NVIVO 8软件分析数据。结果从参与者谈论CSP的方式和驱动该行为的规范中确定了六种不同的论述:1)掠夺性男性性行为; 2)男性尊敬; 3)女性的尊重; 4)赋予现代女性权力; 5)传统的健康观念; 6)公共卫生。合法化CSP的话语主要是由年轻人和媒体借鉴和复制的,而父母只能间接复制。劝阻CSP的话语主要由父母,宗教领袖和学习机构使用,而年轻人本身才间接使用。结论更好地了解年轻人CSP所通过的话语以及这些话语如何在几代人之间传播,可能有助于开发“文化上引人注目的”干预措施,以修改这些话语以增强性健康。

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