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Marital status and HIV risk among women in the Dominican Republic: The role of gendered power indicators on condom use
Methods: We analysed 2007 DHS cross-sectional data from 19818 women. Gendered power indicators included: rights (education, wealth, residence, occupation), responsibilities (household head, access to media, violence exposure), and expectations (sexual initiation, promiscuity, unfaithfulness, sexual submissiveness). Condom use was the main outcome. Nested logistic regressions were completed.
Results: Among never married women, being age 30 and older (p<0.001) and living in the countryside (OR=0.65; p<0.005) decreased the likelihood of condom use. Being in the richer quintile (OR=1.72) and having fair access to media (OR=1.62) increased such likelihood (p<0.001). Among currently married women, similar associations were found; however, women working on sales or living in a female-headed household were 53% and 71%, respectively, more likely to use a condom. Currently married women previously exposed to sexual violence were three times more likely to use a condom that non-exposed women (OR=3.46, p<0.001). Among former married women, the odds of condom use increased for few occupations (sales, domestic, clerical, or services), but decreased with age 40 or older (OR=0.54; p<0.001).
Conclusions: The impact of gendered indicators on condom use among women in the DR varies according to marital status. Strategies to reduce HIV risk should tailor marital status and age to better address specific women’s power issues to use condoms.
Learning Areas:
Diversity and culturePublic health or related research
Social and behavioral sciences
Learning Objectives:
List the main gendered power indicators that affect all women in the Dominican Republic.
Compare the impact of gendered power indicators on condom use across marital status categories.
Discuss the potential areas of gendered power that can be tailored to address condom use among never married, currently married, and former married women in the DR.
Keyword(s): HIV Risk Behavior, Women's Health
Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I am the co-author in this work and I have mentored Michelle Jimenez during her PhD so I know this work well.
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.