Background
Adolescents
living in HIV endemic settings face unique sexual health risks, and in the
context of abject poverty, orphanhood, social marginalization, and
discrimination, adolescents may be particularly at-risk of horizontal HIV
transmission. Street-connected children and youth are a particularly vulnerable
and marginalized population and therefore may be a key population at-risk.
Methods
We
sought to describe the sexual behaviours of street-connected children and youth
in order to comprehend their sexual practices and elucidate circumstances that
put them at increased risk of contracting HIV utilizing qualitative methods
from a sample of street-connected children and youth in Eldoret, Kenya. We
recruited participants aged 11–24 years who had lived on the street for ≥ 3 months to participate in 25 in-depth interviews and 5 focus
group discussions stratified by age and sex.
Results
In
total we interviewed 65 street-connected children and youth; 69 % were
male with a median age of 18 years (IQR: 14–20.5 years). Participants
identified both acceptable and unacceptable sexual acts that occur on the
streets between males and females, between males, and between females. We
grouped reasons for having sex into four categories based on common themes:
pleasure, procreation, transactional, and forced. Transactional sex and
multiple concurrent partnerships were frequently described by participants.
Rape was endemic to street life for girls.
Conclusion
These
findings have important policy and programming implications, specifically for
the government of Kenya’s adolescent reproductive health policy, and highlight
the need to target out-of-school youth. There is an urgent need for social
protection to reduce transactional sex and interventions addressing the
epidemic of sexual and gender-based violence.
Full article at: http://goo.gl/wNO3NL
By: Lonnie Embleton110, Juddy Wachira2*, Allan Kamanda3, Violet Naanyu4, Susanna Winston56, David Ayuku24 and Paula Braitstein12789
1Moi University, College of Health Sciences,
School of Medicine, Eldoret, Kenya
2Academic Model Providing Access to
Healthcare (AMPATH), Eldoret, Kenya
3Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital,
Eldoret, Kenya
4Department of Behavioral Sciences, Moi
University, College of Health Sciences, Eldoret, Kenya
5Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown
University, Providence, RI, USA
6Rhode Island Hospital/Hasbro Children’s
Hospital, Providence, RI, USA
7Indiana University, Fairbanks School of
Public Health, Indianapolis, IN, USA
8University of Toronto, Dalla Lana School of
Public Health, Toronto, ON, Canada
9Regenstrief Institute, Inc, Indianapolis,
IN, USA
10University of Toronto, Institute of Medical
Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Toronto, ON, Canada
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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