High-risk sexual behavior, HIV/STD prevalence, and risk predictors in the social networks of young Roma (Gypsy) men in Bulgaria

Yuri A Amirkhanian, Jeffrey A Kelly, Elena Kabakchieva, Radostina Antonova, Sylvia Vassileva, Wayne J Difranceisco, Timothy L McAuliffe, Boyan Vassilev, Elena Petrova, Roman A Khoursine, Yuri A Amirkhanian, Jeffrey A Kelly, Elena Kabakchieva, Radostina Antonova, Sylvia Vassileva, Wayne J Difranceisco, Timothy L McAuliffe, Boyan Vassilev, Elena Petrova, Roman A Khoursine

Abstract

Roma (Gypsies), the largest and most disadvantaged ethnic minority group in Europe, are believed to be vulnerable to HIV/AIDS. This study's aim was to examine HIV risk in 6 Roma male sociocentric networks (n = 405 men) in Bulgaria. Participants were interviewed concerning their risk practices and tested for HIV/STDs. High-risk sexual behaviors were common. Over 57% of men had multiple sexual partners in the past 3 months. Over one-third of men reported both male and female partners in the past year. Condom use was low. Greater levels of sexual risk were associated with lower intentions and self-efficacy for using condoms, drug use, having male partners, knowing HIV-positive persons, and having higher AIDS knowledge but no prior HIV testing. Two men had HIV infection, 3.7% gonorrhea, and 5.2% chlamydia. HIV prevention interventions directed toward high-risk social networks of Roma are needed before HIV infection becomes more widely established.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Sociocentric Network from the Study Sample. Data visualization: Borgatti SP: NetDraw: Graph Visualization Software. Harvard: Analytic Technologies; 2002 Key to symbols: The “seed” Wave 1 participants Wave 2 participants Wave 3 participants

Source: PubMed

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