Dick Durevall, Richard G Cowden, Sean Beckett, Ayesha B M Kharsany, Lara Lewis, Gavin George, Cherie Cawood, David Khanyile, Kaymarlin Govender
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Using prospective data from young women in South Africa, this study examines the associations of social support with subsequent sexual practices, health behaviour, and health outcomes.</p><p><strong>Method: </strong>We used two rounds of longitudinal data from a sample of n = 1446 HIV-negative emerging adult women, aged 18 to 29 years, who participated in a population-based HIV study in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:有几项研究报告了社会支持对健康行为(包括危险性行为)的益处。因此,社会支持可能是促进个人健康和幸福的重要资源,尤其是在艾滋病感染率高、医疗资源匮乏的地区。然而,此前关于社会支持对年轻女性健康行为的影响的研究结果不一,没有定论。本研究利用南非年轻女性的前瞻性数据,探讨了社会支持与后续性行为、健康行为和健康结果之间的关系:我们使用了两轮纵向数据,这些数据来自参与南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省一项人群 HIV 研究的 n = 1446 名 HIV 阴性的新成年女性样本,她们的年龄在 18 至 29 岁之间。我们运用结果范围纵向设计的分析模板,估算了社会支持组合(即有形支持、教育支持、情感支持)与十种 HIV 相关风险结果之间的关联:结果:有形支持、教育支持和情感支持的组合,以及有形支持本身,都与几种结果的较低风险相关,而教育支持和情感支持本身或组合,几乎没有证据表明与结果相关:本研究强调了有形支持在普遍贫困环境中的保护作用,以及有形支持与无形支持相结合的额外效果。研究结果加强了最近的证据,即把现金和食物形式的支持与社会心理护理结合起来,对减少年轻女性与艾滋病毒相关的风险行为和负面健康结果有好处。
Associations of Social Support with Sexual Practices, Health Behaviours, and Health Outcomes Among Adolescent Girls and Young Women: Evidence From a Longitudinal Study in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Background: Several studies have reported on the benefits of social support for health behaviour, including risky sex. Social support may thus be an important resource for promoting individual health and well-being, particularly in regions where HIV rates are high and healthcare resources are scarce. However, prior research on the implications of social support for the health behaviour of young women has yielded mixed and inconclusive findings. Using prospective data from young women in South Africa, this study examines the associations of social support with subsequent sexual practices, health behaviour, and health outcomes.
Method: We used two rounds of longitudinal data from a sample of n = 1446 HIV-negative emerging adult women, aged 18 to 29 years, who participated in a population-based HIV study in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Applying the analytic template for outcome-wide longitudinal designs, we estimated the associations between combinations of social support (i.e. tangible, educational, emotional) and ten HIV risk-related outcomes.
Results: Combinations of tangible, educational, and emotional support, as well as tangible support by itself, were associated with lower risk for several outcomes, whereas educational and emotional support, by themselves or together, showed little evidence of association with the outcomes.
Conclusion: This study highlights the protective role of tangible support in an environment of widespread poverty, and the additional effect of combining tangible support with non-tangible support. The findings strengthen recent evidence on the benefits of combining support in the form of cash and food with psychosocial care in mitigating risk behaviours associated with HIV and negative health outcomes among young women.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Behavioral Medicine (IJBM) is the official scientific journal of the International Society for Behavioral Medicine (ISBM). IJBM seeks to present the best theoretically-driven, evidence-based work in the field of behavioral medicine from around the globe. IJBM embraces multiple theoretical perspectives, research methodologies, groups of interest, and levels of analysis. The journal is interested in research across the broad spectrum of behavioral medicine, including health-behavior relationships, the prevention of illness and the promotion of health, the effects of illness on the self and others, the effectiveness of novel interventions, identification of biobehavioral mechanisms, and the influence of social factors on health. We welcome experimental, non-experimental, quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods studies as well as implementation and dissemination research, integrative reviews, and meta-analyses.