This study examined
associations between sexual initiation, unprotected sex, and having multiple
sex partners in the past year with participation in a three-year empowerment
program targeting orphan and vulnerable children (OVC).
The Kenya-based program
combines community-conditioned cash transfer, psychosocial empowerment, health
education, and microenterprise development. Program participants
(n = 1,060) were interviewed in a cross-sectional design. Analyses
used gender-stratified hierarchical logit models to assess program
participation and other potential predictors.
Significant predictors of
increased female sexual activity included less program exposure, higher age,
younger age at most recent parental death, fewer years of schooling, higher
food consumption, higher psychological resilience, and lower general
self-efficacy. Significant predictors of increased male sexual activity
included more program exposure, higher age, better food consumption, not having
a living father, and literacy.
Findings support a nuanced view of current cash
transfer programs, where female sexual activity may be reduced through improved
financial status but male sexual activity may increase. Targeting of OVC sexual
risk behaviors would likely benefit from being tailored according to
associations found in this study.
Data suggest involving fathers in sexual
education, targeting women who lost a parent at a younger age, and providing
social support for female OVC may decrease risk of human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV) transmission.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/6o5kAl
By: Goodman ML1,2,3, Selwyn BJ2, Morgan RO2, Lloyd LE2, Mwongera M4, Gitari S4, Keiser PH3.
- 1 Sodzo International.
- 2 Division of Management, Policy and Community Health, School of Public Health , University of Texas , Houston.
- 3 Center for Global Health Education , University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston.
- 4 Community Health Department , Maua Methodist Hospital , Meru County , Kenya.
- J Sex Res. 2016 Mar-Apr;53(3):331-45. doi: 10.1080/00224499.2015.1035429. Epub 2015 Sep 30.
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