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Journal of the International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care (JIAPAC)
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1545109709332468v1
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*Mental Health
*Stress
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Article

The Relationship of Psychological Distress and Unprotected Sex Among Individuals Living With HIV Seeking Mental Health Care

Enbal Shacham*, Tania B. Basta, and Michael Reece

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: shachame{at}epi.wustl.edu.


   Abstract

This study examined the prevalence of sexual behavior and its relationship with psychological distress among individuals with HIV who were seeking mental health care. Upon self-enrollment in HIV-related mental health care, 845 participants completed self-assessments of demographics, psychological distress, and sexual behaviors. Participants were categorized by sexual risk as determined by their reported unprotected sexual activity within the previous 30 days: receptive anal or vaginal sex (high-risk), insertive anal or vaginal sex (moderate-risk), oral sex (low-risk), and no sex (no-risk). The majority of the sample was classified as no-risk, 11% low-risk, 5% moderate-risk, and 17% were high-risk. Levels of psychological distress did not differ across risk levels. Overall psychological distress levels were elevated, 19% of the sample expressed severe distress. Use of illicit drugs, alcohol, and no-AIDS diagnosis predicted high-risk sexual behaviors. A substantial proportion of the sample reported engaging in high-risk sexual behaviors, which signifies the need to further incorporate sex-related prevention efforts among HIV-infected populations.

First published on March 4, 2009, doi:10.1177/1545109709332468

Journal of the International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care (JIAPAC) 2009;8:93.

A more recent version of this article appeared on March 1, 2009


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