Understanding HIV Risk Behaviors Among Young Men in South Africa: A Syndemic Approach

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Abstract

Young men in South Africa experience several adverse socio-structural and psychosocial factors that may contribute HIV risk behaviors. This study applied a syndemic framework to explore whether these syndemic factors are interconnected and work in synergy to increase HIV risk behaviors. Five syndemic factors were assessed including: binge drinking, polydrug use, depressive symptoms, violence and food insecurity on two HIV risk behaviors: multiple sex partners and transactional sex. Participants were (N = 1233) young men aged 18–29 years from a township in Cape Town, South Africa. Bivariate logistic regression analysis demonstrated that many of the syndemic factors were related to one another. Pairwise interactions (on an additive scale) among the syndemic factors revealed significant positive interactions between binge drinking and violence on greater odds of reporting multiple sex partners (aOR = 5.10, 95% CI 3.10, 8.29; p =

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Okafor, C. N., Christodoulou, J., Bantjes, J., Qondela, T., Stewart, J., Shoptaw, S., … Rotherman-Borus, M. J. (2018). Understanding HIV Risk Behaviors Among Young Men in South Africa: A Syndemic Approach. AIDS and Behavior, 22(12), 3962–3970. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-018-2227-x

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