Exchange of Sex for Drugs or Money in Adolescents and Young Adults: An Examination of Sociodemographic Factors, HIV-Related Risk, and Community Context.

TitleExchange of Sex for Drugs or Money in Adolescents and Young Adults: An Examination of Sociodemographic Factors, HIV-Related Risk, and Community Context.
Publication TypePublication
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsBoyer CB, Greenberg L, Chutuape K, Walker B, Monte D, Kirk J, Ellen JM
Corporate AuthorsAdolescent Medicine Trials Network
JournalJ Community Health
Volume42
Issue1
Pagination90-100
Date Published2017 Feb
ISSN1573-3610
KeywordsAdolescent, Age Factors, Drug Trafficking, Female, HIV Infections, Humans, Male, Residence Characteristics, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Sex Work, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Socioeconomic Factors, Substance-Related Disorders, United States, Young Adult
Abstract

<p>The goal of this research was to examine associations among sociodemographic factors, HIV risk, and community context (e.g., economic insecurity, job training, housing instability, crime victimization, and perceived community norms) in adolescents and young adults who ever exchanged sex for drugs or money. Anonymous survey data were collected using ACASIs at community venues where adolescents and young adults congregate in resource-challenged, STI prevalent, urban, US neighborhoods. Conventional descriptive statistics, Fisher's exact tests, and generalized estimating equations approaches were used to examine associations. Participants (1818, 95.5 % of those screened eligible) were, on average, aged 21.0 years; 42.2 % were males, and 4.6 % were transgender. Almost one-third (32.1 %) identified as gay or lesbian, 18.1 % identified as bisexual; 66.2 % were Black and 21.0 % were Hispanic; 1.3 % was 'living on the street'. A sizeable proportion reported HIV-related risk: 16.3 % exchanged sex, 12.6 % had sex with someone they knew to be HIV-infected, 7.8 % had sex with someone who injected drugs, and 1.3 % injected drugs. Multivariate comparisons identified a number of variables (e.g., being male or transgender, homelessness, sex with a partner who has HIV, STI history, unemployment, job training access, housing instability, crime victimization, perceived community norms) that were significantly associated with exchange of sex (p < 0.05). This research contributes to the knowledge-base regarding exchange of sex among adolescents and young adults, particularly as it relates to community context. Longitudinal studies to describe the trajectory of social, health, and physical risks and consequences are needed for development of effective evidence-based prevention strategies.</p>

DOI10.1007/s10900-016-0234-2
Alternate JournalJ Community Health
PubMed ID27498094
PubMed Central IDPMC5253104
Grant ListU01 HD040533 / HD / NICHD NIH HHS / United States
U01 HD040474 / HD / NICHD NIH HHS / United States
UM1 AI069412 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
U01 HD040499 / HD / NICHD NIH HHS / United States
U01 HD040470 / HD / NICHD NIH HHS / United States
U01 HD068030 / HD / NICHD NIH HHS / United States