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Microbicide and Female Condom Acceptability
for HIV/STD Prevention Among Female Sex Workers in Southern
China
Research Method:
Basic Research
Principal Investigators:
Margaret R. Weeks, Ph.D., PI (ICR), Susu Liao, Ph.D., Co-PI
(Peking Union Medical College)
Grant:
Fogarty International Research Collaboration Award for HIV-AIDS
Partners:
Department of Epidemiology, Peking Union Medical College (PUMC),
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences (CAMS)
Dates of Study:
2003-2006
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Abstract
HIV/AIDS and STDs have become important issues in China in the
past two decades, with the rising rate of HIV/STD infection,
particularly among women. Though HIV/AIDS campaigns have been
launched for years by the Chinese government, the population's
knowledge of HIV/AIDS is superficial and perception of risk
is extremely low. Additionally, social stigma associated with
an HIV-positive diagnosis generates a reluctance to access testing,
treatment, or information on prevention. The lack of knowledge
and prevention models is combined with a shift in social and
economic structures, and gender norms, leading to increased
drug use and female prostitution in both rural and urban areas,
and increased risk for HIV/STD infection. Innovative and multiple
HIV/STD prevention approaches, including women-controlled methods,
are desperately needed. This three-year study aims to generate
knowledge regarding the acceptability of vaginal microbicides
and female condoms for high-risk women in China, and these women's
ability and willingness to use them for HIV/STD prevention.
The study extends the work of ICR's
"Microbicide Acceptability to Prevent HIV in High-Risk
Women" project by replicating some of the project's
design in the Chinese context. This study intends to establish
a foundation for a future, larger study of microbicide and female
condom acceptability in China. |
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Project
Goals and Objectives
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Examine in three southern
Chinese rural and semi-rural towns the readiness
for and acceptability of vaginal microbicide prevention
methods and the female condom among Chinese female
sex workers who are at high risk of contracting
or transmitting HIV through unprotected sex. |
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Identify the contextual
factors in the Chinese setting that affect acceptability
of microbicide products and the female condom, including
ethnic/cultural beliefs, peer norms, personal risk
context (prostitution, migration, abusive partners),
economic conditions, social settings, partners and
partner relationships, and concern for reproduction. |
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Assess the conditions
under which Chinese female sex workers will be willing
and/or able to use a vaginal microbicide for HIV
prevention during their regular sexual activity
with their primary, casual, or paying partners. |
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Assess the conditions
under which Chinese female sex workers will be willing
and/or able to use a female condom for HIV prevention
during their regular sexual activity with their
primary, casual or paying partners. |
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Establish the international
research partnership, infrastructure and foundation
for conducting a larger study of microbicide and
female condom acceptability and adoption for HIV/STD
prevention with female sex workers in these three
or other rural and semi-urban towns in southern
China. |
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Staff
Contact:
Margaret
R. Weeks, Ph.D.,
Principal Investigator
Associate Director, ICR
Project Staff:
ICR
Margaret R. Weeks, Ph.D., Principal Investigator
Associate Director, ICR
Maryann Abbott, M.A., Ethnographic Trainer
PUMC
Susu Liao, Ph.D.,
Co-Principal Investigator
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Project
Details
The project will work in three target
communities (Fushan, Yongfa, Pingxiang) in the southern Chinese
provinces of Hainan and Guangxi. The three communities all have
locations that serve as sex establishments (roadside restaurants,
hair, beauty and massage parlors, and hotels), and out of which
female sex workers operate. The study uses both quantitative
and qualitative methods to identify factors that affect the
acceptability and use of microbicides and female condoms among
high-risk women from the target areas. These factors include:
ethnic background, age, martial status, local variations in
sex work, educational attainment, reproductive intentions, current
contraceptive/STD-prevention methods, history of STD infection,
prior exposure to prevention interventions, sexual assertiveness,
relationship power, history of abuse, number of sex partners,
and prior experience with a female-controlled HIV/STD prevention
method. Staff of local collaborating institutions will identify
and recruit woman and proprietors for the different components
of the study, which will take place in each town, including:
1) elicitation exercises with 40 sex workers; 2) in-depth interviews
of 15 sex workers and 5 proprietors; and 3) a survey of 100
sex workers.
A significant component of the study is the transfer and sharing
of technologies of research methodologies among the international
team of research collaborators, and from the research institutes
in the U.S. and China to the local partner organizations in
each of the study sites. Staff of local institutions, primarily
health agencies, will receive training in both qualitative and
quantitative research methods. Qualitative methods, which receive
limited consideration in medical and public health training
in China, combined with quantitative research, are important
tools for conducting applied public health research. This study
will set the foundation (training, local relationships, initial
data) for a larger microbicide and female condom acceptability
study in these - and other - southern Chinese provinces.
Project Findings
Poster presentation - Ethnographic component (pdf) |
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Link
to Research Methods page
Links to Other Projects
Microbicide
Acceptability to Prevent HIV in High-Risk Women
Female Condom Use in High
Risk Women as Predictor of Microbicide Readiness
Links to External Sites
John E. Fogarty
International Center for Advanced Study in the Health Sciences
Peking
Union Medical College
Chinese
Academy of Medical Sciences
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