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Intimate Partner Violence and PrEP Acceptability Among Low-Income, Young Black Women: Exploring the Mediating Role of Reproductive Coercion
by
Willie, Tiara
, Kershaw, Trace
, Campbell, Jacquelyn C.
, Alexander, Kamila A.
in
Acceptability
/ Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ African Americans
/ Age
/ Aggression
/ AIDS
/ Antiretroviral drugs
/ Birth
/ Birth control
/ Black people
/ Black women
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Coercion
/ Community organizations
/ Contraception
/ Disease prevention
/ Domestic violence
/ Female
/ Females
/ Gender roles
/ Health Psychology
/ HIV
/ HIV Infections - prevention & control
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Humans
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Intimate Partner Violence
/ Low income groups
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Original Paper
/ Path analysis
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care
/ Poverty
/ Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Reproduction
/ Reproductive Behavior
/ Sabotage
/ Sexual Partners
/ Spouse Abuse
/ Subtypes
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Violence
/ Women
/ Womens health
/ Young Adult
2017
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Intimate Partner Violence and PrEP Acceptability Among Low-Income, Young Black Women: Exploring the Mediating Role of Reproductive Coercion
by
Willie, Tiara
, Kershaw, Trace
, Campbell, Jacquelyn C.
, Alexander, Kamila A.
in
Acceptability
/ Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ African Americans
/ Age
/ Aggression
/ AIDS
/ Antiretroviral drugs
/ Birth
/ Birth control
/ Black people
/ Black women
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Coercion
/ Community organizations
/ Contraception
/ Disease prevention
/ Domestic violence
/ Female
/ Females
/ Gender roles
/ Health Psychology
/ HIV
/ HIV Infections - prevention & control
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Humans
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Intimate Partner Violence
/ Low income groups
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Original Paper
/ Path analysis
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care
/ Poverty
/ Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Reproduction
/ Reproductive Behavior
/ Sabotage
/ Sexual Partners
/ Spouse Abuse
/ Subtypes
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Violence
/ Women
/ Womens health
/ Young Adult
2017
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Intimate Partner Violence and PrEP Acceptability Among Low-Income, Young Black Women: Exploring the Mediating Role of Reproductive Coercion
by
Willie, Tiara
, Kershaw, Trace
, Campbell, Jacquelyn C.
, Alexander, Kamila A.
in
Acceptability
/ Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ Adolescent
/ Adult
/ African Americans
/ Age
/ Aggression
/ AIDS
/ Antiretroviral drugs
/ Birth
/ Birth control
/ Black people
/ Black women
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Coercion
/ Community organizations
/ Contraception
/ Disease prevention
/ Domestic violence
/ Female
/ Females
/ Gender roles
/ Health Psychology
/ HIV
/ HIV Infections - prevention & control
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Humans
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Intimate Partner Violence
/ Low income groups
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Original Paper
/ Path analysis
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care
/ Poverty
/ Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Reproduction
/ Reproductive Behavior
/ Sabotage
/ Sexual Partners
/ Spouse Abuse
/ Subtypes
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Violence
/ Women
/ Womens health
/ Young Adult
2017
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Intimate Partner Violence and PrEP Acceptability Among Low-Income, Young Black Women: Exploring the Mediating Role of Reproductive Coercion
Journal Article
Intimate Partner Violence and PrEP Acceptability Among Low-Income, Young Black Women: Exploring the Mediating Role of Reproductive Coercion
2017
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Overview
A few studies suggest that women who experience intimate partner violence (IPV) are willing to use pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), but no research has examined mediators of this relationship. The current study used path analysis to examine a phenomenon closely associated with IPV: reproductive coercion, or explicit male behaviors to promote pregnancy of a female partner without her knowledge or against her will. Birth control sabotage and pregnancy coercion—two subtypes of reproductive coercion behaviors—were examined as mediators of the relationship between IPV and PrEP acceptability among a cohort of 147 Black women 18–25 years of age recruited from community-based organizations in an urban city. IPV experiences were indirectly related to PrEP acceptability through birth control sabotage (indirect effect = 0.08;
p
< 0.05), but not to pregnancy coercion. Findings illustrate the importance of identifying and addressing reproductive coercion when assessing whether PrEP is clinically appropriate and a viable option to prevent HIV among women who experience IPV.
Publisher
Springer US,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
/ Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
/ Adult
/ Age
/ AIDS
/ Birth
/ Coercion
/ Female
/ Females
/ HIV
/ HIV Infections - prevention & control
/ Human immunodeficiency virus
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Patient Acceptance of Health Care
/ Poverty
/ Sabotage
/ Subtypes
/ Violence
/ Women
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