Racial Discrimination and HIV-Related Risk Behaviors in Southeast Louisiana
OBJECTIVES:
We
examined the relationship between cumulative experiences of racial
discrimination and HIV-related risk taking, and whether these relationships are
mediated through alcohol use among African Americans in semi-rural southeast
Louisiana.
METHODS:
Participants
(N = 214) reported on experiences of discrimination, HIV sexual risk-taking,
history of sexually transmitted infection (STI), and health behaviors including
alcohol use in the previous 90 days. Experiences of discrimination (scaled both
by frequency of occurrence and situational counts) as a predictor of a sexual
risk composite score as well as a history of STI was assessed using
multivariate linear and logistic regression, respectively, including tests for
mediation by alcohol use.
RESULTS:
Discrimination
was common in this cohort, with respondents confirming their experience on
average 7 of the 9 potential situations and on more than 34 separate occasions.
After adjustment, discrimination was significantly associated with increasing
sexual risk-taking and lifetime history of STI when measured either by
frequency of occurrence or number of situations, although there was no evidence
that these relationships were mediated through alcohol use.
CONCLUSIONS:
Cumulative
experiences of discrimination may play a significant role in sexual risk
behavior and consequently increase vulnerability to HIV and other STIs.
- 1Allan Rosenfield Global Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
- 2University of Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY, USA.
- 3Comprehensive Alcohol Research Center, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, LA, USA.
- 4University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
- 5Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA; Comprehensive Alcohol Research Center, Louisiana State University, Health Sciences Center, USA. ktheall@tulane.edu.
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