Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2019
Title: FACTORS OF RISKY SEXUAL BEHAVIOR AMONG LONG HAUL TRUCKERS IN A SOUTHERN NIGERIAN TOWN
Authors: OKAFOR, Kingsley C
Keywords: SOUTHERN NIGERIAN TOWN
SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
Long-haul drivers
Issue Date: 14-Jul-2019
Abstract: Background Long-haul drivers play a role in the spread of sexually transmitted infections (STI) globally. Truck drivers engage in frequent travel away from home. They are exposed to risky sex with commercial sex workers who are a reservoir of HIV and other STIs. The study aimed to identify factors associated with commercial sexual exposure among long-haul truckers in a southern Nigerian town. Methods A sample of 300 long-haul truckers from a highway park in Ahor, southern Nigeria was recruited in a cross-sec tional study. An interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to collect socio-demographic and sexual risk behavior data. Data were analyzed with SPSS version 20 software. Chi square test, Odds ratio, and confidence intervals were used to find the association between condom use, STI history, HIV status, duration of a trip, number of sexual partners, and truckers’ exposure to commercial sex workers. Results While 42.0% of the truckers used condoms, 58.0% were non-users. Reasons for non-condom use were commit ment to partner (72.0%), lack of pleasure (21.0%), and beliefs (7.0%). Fifty percent of respondents reported two or less sex ual contacts while a third of them reported 12 sexual contacts in 6 months. Overall, 59.0% of respondents had a history ofmultiple sexual partners. Factors associated with truckers’ exposure to a commercial sex worker were use of psychoac tive substance (OR 2.5 (1.5–4.4), p=0.00; condom use (OR 16.3 (8.0–32.5), p=0.00; previous sexually transmitted infec tion (OR 2.5 (1.2–5.1), p=0.01. The odds of single-sex part ner exposure to a commercial sex worker were 10% less than the odds in multiple sex partner truckers, p=0.00. Conclusion This study shows that psychoactive substances and condoms may be fueling exposure to commercial sex among truck drivers. Intervention programs should emphasize a single partner relationship, target substance users and highlight the potential impact of previous sexually transmitted infections on the risk of acquiring an HIV infection. Disclosure No significant relationships.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2019
Appears in Collections:Research Articles



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