Abstract
AJOL Abstract: Background: HIV/AIDS is a pandemic with serious consequences. It affects such vulnerable groups as street children, adolescents and particularly females. Methodology: In 1999, a study was conducted among 686 randomly selected single females aged 10 to 24 years, who hawked food and other items in motor parks, in order to identify their HIV/AIDS risk and examine their possible role in its transmission, as a baseline for an intervention. Focus Group Discussion and adapted Participatory Action Research methodology were used to obtain information. Results: Eighty-one per cent had heard about HIV/AIDS and its sexual transmission. Thirty-eight per cent did not abstain from sexual intercourse, 54.0% of these had multiple partners, 38.0% used the condom, and 7.4% had ever been raped during the course of their jobs as hawkers. Their risk perception was poor. Conclusion: This target population is at high risk of contracting HIV infection and could transmit the infection within the community, thereby contributing significantly to the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Female adolescent hawkers should be targeted with appropriate programmes that would empower them for the prevention of HIV/AIDS
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CITATION STYLE
Araoye, M. (2005). Female adolescent hawkers in Nigeria: HIV/AIDS-related knowledge, attitudes and behaviour. Journal of Community Medicine and Primary Health Care, 16(2). https://doi.org/10.4314/jcmphc.v16i2.32409
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