Migration and HIV research in
sub-Saharan Africa has focused on HIV risks to male migrants, yet women’s levels
of participation in internal migration have met or exceeded those of men in the
region. Moreover, studies that have examined HIV risks to female migrants found
higher risk behavior and HIV prevalence among migrant compared to non-migrant
women. However, little is known about the pathways through which participation
in migration leads to higher risk behavior in women.
This study aimed to
characterize the contexts and processes that may facilitate HIV acquisition and
transmission among migrant women in the Kisumu area of Nyanza Province, Kenya.
We used qualitative methods, including 6 months of participant observation in
women’s common migration destinations and in-depth semi-structured interviews
conducted with 15 male and 40 female migrants selected from these destinations.
Gendered aspects of the migration process may be linked to the high risks of
HIV observed in female migrants— in the circumstances that trigger migration,
livelihood strategies available to female migrants, and social features of migration
destinations. Migrations were often precipitated by household shocks due to
changes in marital status (as when widowhood resulted in disinheritance) and
gender-based violence. Many migrants engaged in transactional sex, of varying
regularity, from clandestine to overt, to supplement earnings from informal
sector trading.
Migrant women are at high risk of HIV transmission and acquisition:
the circumstances that drove migration may have also increased HIV infection
risk at origin; and social contexts in destinations facilitate having multiple
sexual partners and engaging in transactional sex.
We propose a model for
understanding the pathways through which migration contributes to HIV risks in
women in high HIV prevalence areas in Africa, highlighting potential
opportunities for primary and secondary HIV prevention at origins and
destinations, and at key ‘moments of vulnerability’ in the migration process.
Below: Kenya Counties (2013) and Study Area
Full article
at: http://goo.gl/RPYyKC
By: Carol S. Camlin,1 Zachary A. Kwena,2 Shari L. Dworkin,1 Craig R. Cohen,1 and Elizabeth A. Bukusi3
1University of California at San Francisco
2Kenya Medical Research Institute
3Kenya Medical Research Institute,
University of California at San Francisco and University of Washington
Corresponding Author: Email: ude.fscu@nilmac.lorac (C.
Camlin)
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight


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