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A qualitative study of attitudes towards, typologies, and drivers of concurrent partnerships among people of black Caribbean ethnicity in England and their implications for STI prevention

机译:英格兰黑色加勒比民族人民态度的态度和驱动程序的定性研究及其对STI预防的影响

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BACKGROUND:Partner concurrency, (having sexual partnerships overlapping in time), especially when condoms are not used, can facilitate sexually transmitted infections (STI) transmission. In Britain, STI diagnoses rates and the reporting of concurrency are higher among black Caribbeans than other ethnic groups. We explored attitudes towards, drivers, characteristics, and contexts of concurrent partnerships, and their implications for STI risk among black Caribbeans in England.METHODS:Purposive sampling, by sex and age-groups, was used to recruit participants (overall n?=?59) from five sexual health clinics and community settings in London and Birmingham, England. Audio-recorded four focus group discussions (n?=?28 participants), and in-depth interviews (n?=?31) were conducted (June 2014-December 2015). Transcribed data were thematically analysed using Framework Analysis.RESULTS:'Main plus' and 'non-main' concurrency were identified in this population. Main plus concurrency involves an individual having a main partner with whom s/he has a "relationship" with, and the individual and/or their partner secretly or explicitly have other non-main partners. In contrast, non-main concurrency entails having multiple, non-committed partners overlapping in time, where concurrency is usually taken as a given, making disclosure to partners irrelevant. While main partnerships were usually long-term, non-main partnerships ranged in duration from a single event through to encounters lasting several months/years. Condomless sex was common with ex/long-term/married/cohabiting partners; whereas condoms were typically used with non-main partners. However, condom use declined with partnership duration and familiarity with partners. Awareness of partners' concurrency facilitated condom use, STI-testing, and partner notification. While unresolved feelings, or sharing children with ex-partners, usually facilitated main plus concurrency; non-main concurrency was common among young, and single people. Gender norms, notions of masculinity, and sexual desires influenced concurrency. Black Caribbean popular music, social media, peer pressure, and relationship norms among black Caribbeans were also perceived to encourage concurrency, especially among men and young people.CONCLUSIONS:Concurrency among black Caribbeans is shaped by a complex interaction between emotional/psychological, interpersonal, sociocultural, and structural factors. Concurrency type, its duration, and awareness influence sexual health choices, and thus STI risk in this population. Collecting these data during clinic consultations could facilitate offering partner notification methods tailored to concurrency type. Gender- and age-specific, culturally-sensitive interventions addressing STI risks associated with concurrency are needed.
机译:背景:合作伙伴并发,(具有性伙伴关系及时重叠),特别是当没有使用避孕套时,可以促进性传播的感染(STI)传播。在英国,STI诊断率,并发的报告比其他族裔群体相比,黑色加勒比地区更高。我们探讨了对兼职伙伴关系的态度,司机,特征和背景,以及英格兰黑色加勒比海的STI风险的影响。方法:用性别和年龄组采用目的地抽样,用于招募参与者(总体n?=? 59)来自伦敦和伯明翰,英格兰的五个性健康诊所和社区环境。音频记录的四个焦点组讨论(N?= 28名参与者),并进行了深入的访谈(N?=?31)(2014年6月至2015年12月)。使用框架分析进行专题分析转录数据。结果:在本人中确定了“主要加”和“非主要”并发性。主要加同一症涉及一个拥有与他/谁具有“关系”的主要伙伴的个人,以及个人和/或其伙伴秘密或明确地拥有其他非主要合作伙伴。相比之下,非主要并发需要具有与时间重叠的多个非承诺合作伙伴,并发正常作为给定,使伙伴不相关的披露。虽然主要伙伴关系通常是长期的,但非主要伙伴关系在一次活动中,持续到持续数月/年的持续时间。通气性的性别与前/长期/已婚/同居合作伙伴常见;避孕套通常与非主伙伴一起使用。然而,安全套使用伙伴关系持续时间和熟悉伙伴。对合作伙伴并发促进安全套使用,STI测试和合作伙伴通知的认识。虽然未解决的感受,或与前伙伴共享儿童,通常促进主要加同意性;非主要并发性在年轻人和单身人士之间是常见的。性别规范,男性气质概念,性欲影响并发。黑色加勒比海热门音乐,社交媒体,同伴压力和黑色加勒比地区的关系规范也被认为鼓励并发,特别是男人和年轻人。结论:黑色加勒比海的并发性是情感/心理,人际关系之间的复杂互动,社会文化和结构因素。并发类型,其持续时间和意识影响性健康选择,从而在这群人口中的风险。在诊所咨询期间收集这些数据可以促进提供对并发类型定制的合作伙伴通知方法。需要进行性别和年龄特异性的,文化敏感的干预措施,用于解决与并发性相关的STI风险。

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