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2005
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25 May 2007
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HIV INFECTION
Tran
TN, Detels R, Long HT, Van Phung L, Lan HP. HIV infection and risk
characteristics among female sex workers in Hanoi, Vietnam.
J Acquir
Immune Defic Syndr. 39(5):581-6, 2005.
The
prevalence of HIV/sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) was determined, the risk
characteristics examined, and factors associated with HIV infection identified
among noninstitutionalized female sex workers (FSWs), using a cross-sectional
survey with 2-stage cluster sampling. Four hundred FSWs were interviewed face to
face using a structured questionnaire and tested for HIV, syphilis, Chlamydia
infection, and gonorrhea. HIV seroprevalence was 12%, syphilis 17% (using the
treponemal pallidum hemagglutination assay), Chlamydia infection 3.8% (using
polymerase chain reaction [PCR]), and gonorrhea 6.3% (PCR). Lower-class FSWs
averaged 2 clients per day, and middle-class FSWs about 1.2. Median duration in
sex work was 2.3 years. Consistent condom use was 63% with irregular clients,
41% with regular clients, and only 4.8% with "love mates." Fifty-five percent
had had sex with a drug user(s). Thirty-eight percent used drugs, of whom 83%
injected. Factors associated with HIV included being young, having a low level
of education, longer residence in Hanoi, being a lower-class FSW, having higher
income compared with peers, perception of self being at low risk for HIV, poor
knowledge of HIV, and sharing injecting equipment. Intervention strategies
should include reduction of both stigmatization and sharing of drug
paraphernalia, promotion of nonstigmatizing voluntary testing and counseling,
and aggressive marketing and promotion of condoms.
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