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The Importance of Sex in the Lives of Women Living...
Journal article

The Importance of Sex in the Lives of Women Living with HIV: A Critical Quantitative Analysis

Abstract

The authors explored the importance of sex for 1,289 women living with HIV in Canada. Approximately half of women viewed sex as “very” (19.6%) or “somewhat” important (32.3%) and the remaining reported “neither important or unimportant” (22.0%), “somewhat unimportant” (5.4%), or “not at all important” (20.1%). Women who had a regular sex partner, identified as African, Caribbean, or Black, were more educated, believed HIV treatment prevents transmission, or had better physical health-related quality-of-life reported greater importance of sex, whereas those who were older, used illicit drugs, or experienced violence in adulthood reported lesser importance. Findings underscore the diversity of women's perspectives within the context of their lives.

Authors

Carter A; Greene S; Money D; Sanchez M; Webster K; Nicholson V; Brotto LA; Hankins C; Kestler M; Pick N

Journal

International Journal of Sexual Health, Vol. 30, No. 1, pp. 92–110

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

January 2, 2018

DOI

10.1080/19317611.2018.1447527

ISSN

1931-7611

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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