A cross-sectional study to evaluate factors related to condom use with commercial sexual partners in workers from Ecuadorian companies

BMC Public Health
María C CabezasAdelin Albert

Abstract

Unprotected intercourse with sex workers is one of the major risk factors for HIV infection. Consistent condom use is a prerequisite to lower the incidence of HIV. We assessed the prevalence of condom use and its determinants among company workers engaged with commercial sexual partners in Ecuador. The study was based on a random sample of 115 companies and 1,732 workers stratified by province and working sector and utilized the "Behavioral Surveillance Surveys - Adult questionnaire" developed by Family Health International. Of the 1,561 sexually active workers, 311 (19.9%) reported having intercourse with sex workers. Among them 25.9% did not use a condom at the last sexual intercourse. As for condom use frequency over the last 12 months, 29/208 (13.9%) reported never, 23 (11.1%) sometimes, 24 (11.5%) almost every time and 132 (63.5%) every time. Factors adversely affecting condom use frequency over the last 12 months were female gender (OR = 4.56, 95% CI: 1.45-14.4), older age (OR = 1.07, 95% CI: 1.03-1.10), low educational level (OR = 4.69, 95% CI: 1.95-11.3) and married workers living with spouse (OR = 7.66, 95 % CI: 3.08-19.1). By contrast, factors such as age at first sexual intercourse, job category, HIV transmission and...Continue Reading

References

Jun 14, 2006·BMC Public Health·Juan-Pablo GutiérrezStefano M Bertozzi
Jul 6, 2006·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·Bridget M Kuehn
Jan 5, 2007·Health Promotion International·William SorensenJosé Enrique Vilches
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Jan 29, 2014·The Psychoanalytic Quarterly·Ellen Pinsky

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Citations

Dec 3, 2016·PeerJ·Adam L BeckmanLauretta E Grau

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