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Paper Title

An Electronic Daily Diary Study of Anal Intercourse in Drug-Using Women

Keywords

  • heterosexual anal intercourse
  • women
  • drug use
  • daily diary study
  • electronic data collection
  • sexual behavior
  • hiv prevention
  • risk behaviors
  • methamphetamine
  • cocaine
  • condom use
  • sexual lubricants
  • harm reduction
  • substance use and sexual activity
  • sexual health
  • smartphone-based research
  • behavioral interventions
  • african american women
  • latina women
  • public health
  • high-risk sexual behavior
  • sex work
  • sti prevention
  • sexual pleasure
  • multiple sexual partners
  • transactional sex
  • injection drug use
  • health disparities
  • reproductive health
  • intimate partner violence
  • sexual risk-taking
  • mobile health (mhealth)
  • real-time data collection

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 19 | Issue : 12 | Page No : 2325–2332

Published On

April, 2015

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Abstract

Women (N = 138) with histories of illicit drug use were recruited into an electronic diary study that used Android smartphones for data collection. The diary was to be completed each day for 12 weeks using an “app” created in HTML5 and accessed over the Internet via smartphone. Data collection included information on sexual behaviors with up to 10 partners per day and contextual factors surrounding sexual behavior such as drug use before/after, type of sexual behavior (oral, vaginal, anal), and other activities such as using condoms for vaginal and anal intercourse and use of sexual lubricants. The sample was predominantly African American (58 %); 20 % Latina, 20 % White and 2 % reported as Other. Most women reported either less than a high school education (33 %) or having a high school diploma (33 %). The mean age was 39 years (SD = 11.78). Anal intercourse occurred on days when women also reported using illicit drugs, specifically methamphetamine and cocaine. Anal intercourse was not an isolated sexual activity, but took place on days when vaginal intercourse and giving and receiving oral sex also occurred along with illicit drug use. Anal intercourse also occurred on days when women reported they wanted sex. HIV prevention interventions must address the risks of anal intercourse for women, taking into account concurrent drug use and sexual pleasure that may reduce individual harm-reduction behaviors.

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