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      Sexual Power and HIV Risk, South Africa 1

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          Abstract

          Among a sample of young women, limited sexual power was associated with inconsistent condom use but not directly with HIV.

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          Most cited references23

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          Risk factors for domestic violence: findings from a South African cross-sectional study.

          In 1998 a cross-sectional study of violence against women was undertaken in three provinces of South Africa. The objectives were to measure the prevalence of physical, sexual and emotional abuse of women, to identify risk factors and associated health problems and health service use. A multi-stage sampling design was used with clusters sampled with probability proportional to number of households and households were randomly selected from within clusters. One randomly selected woman aged 18-49 years was interviewed in each selected home. Interviews were held with a total 1306 women, the response rate was 90.3% of eligible women. For the risk factor analysis, multiple logistic regression models were fitted from a large pool of candidate explanatory variables, while allowing for sampling design and interviewer effects. The lifetime prevalence of experiencing physical violence from a current or ex-husband or boyfriend was 24.6%, and 9.5% had been assaulted in the previous year. Domestic violence was significantly positively associated with violence in her childhood, her having no further education, liberal ideas on women's roles, drinking alcohol, having another partner in the year, having a confidant(e), his boy child preference, conflict over his drinking, either partner financially supporting the home, frequent conflict generally, and living outside the Northern Province. No significant associations were found with partners' ages, employment, migrant status, financial disparity, cohabitation, household possessions, urbanisation, marital status, crowding, communication, his having other partners, his education, her attitudes towards violence or her perceptions of cultural norms on women's role. The findings suggest that domestic violence is most strongly related to the status of women in a society and to the normative use of violence in conflict situations or as part of the exercise of power. We conclude by discussing implications for developing theory on causal factors in domestic violence.
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            Relationship power, condom use and HIV risk among women in the USA.

            Women's ability to negotiate safer sexual practices, particularly condom use, is a vital component of HIV/STD prevention strategies. Gender-based power imbalances may constrain women's negotiation ability, yet few empirical studies have tested the hypothesis that sexual relationship power constitutes a key factor in condom use negotiation. In this investigation, a new measure - the Sexual Relationship Power Scale (SRPS) - was applied. Data were collected from 388, mostly Latina, women at an urban community health centre in Massachusetts. Women with high levels of relationship power were five times as likely as women with low levels to report consistent condom use, after controlling for sociodemographic and psychosocial variables (p < 0.05). Population attributable risk estimates indicate that 52% of the lack of consistent condom use among women can be attributed to low sexual relationship power. The strong association between the Sexual Relationship Power Scale and consistent condom use supports the hypothesis that relationship power plays a key role in safer sex decision making. These findings underscore the importance of including the issue of relationship power in the design and implementation of programmes that promote sexual and reproductive health, as well as research investigating condom use and HIV risk.
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              The epidemiology of rape and sexual coercion in South Africa: an overview.

              During 1999 the issue of rape in South Africa was debated at the highest levels. The epidemiology of rape has become an issue of considerable political importance and sensitivity, with President Mbeki demanding an answer to the question: how much rape is there in South Africa? The purpose of this paper is both to summarise and synthesise the findings of research to provide an overview of the epidemiology of rape of women in South Africa and to show how difficult it is to answer the President's question. The review begins by considering why rape is so difficult to research. Data available shows that rape reported to the police (240 incidents of rape and attempted rape per 100,000 women each year) represents the tip of an ice berg of sexual coercion. Representative community-based surveys have found, for example, that in the 17-48 age group there are 2070 such incidents per 100,000 women per year. Non-consensual sex in marriage and dating relationships is believed to be very common but is usually not well reported in surveys. Forced sexual initiation is reported by almost a third of adolescent girls. In addition coerced consensual sex is a common problem in schools, workplaces and amongst peers. Knowledge of causal and contributory factors influencing the high levels of rape are also discussed. We conclude that the rape statistic for the country is currently elusive but levels of non-consensual and coerced sex are clearly very high. International comparison needs to be approached with caution because most developing countries lack the infrastructure for accurate crime reporting and do not have such a substantial body of survey data.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Emerg Infect Dis
                Emerging Infect. Dis
                EID
                Emerging Infectious Diseases
                Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
                1080-6040
                1080-6059
                November 2004
                : 10
                : 11
                : 1996-2004
                Affiliations
                [* ]University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;
                []University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA;
                []University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Audrey Pettifor, Reproductive Health Research Unit, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Chris Hani Bagawanath Hospital, P.O. Bertsham 2013, Soweto, South Africa; fax: 27-11-933-1227; email: a.pettifor@ 123456rhrujhb.co.za
                Article
                04-0252
                10.3201/eid1011.040252
                3328992
                15550214
                ee0fc04d-a429-4885-964e-5d5bb48e2b50
                History
                Categories
                News and Notes
                News and Notes

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                hiv,condoms,south africa,women,sexual behavior,power,adolescents
                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                hiv, condoms, south africa, women, sexual behavior, power, adolescents

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