Influence of social support, sense of community, experience of community violence, and trauma history on sexual risk, substance use, and victimization in African American women (original) (raw)
Abstract
Background: Bioecological Systems Theory (BST; Bronfenbrenner, 1993) may help us understand the context of multiple risk issues in low income African American women at disproportionate HIV risk. Preliminary baseline data from an ongoing prospective study were used to examine one of several BST-based models, including individual and sociocultural variables as they relate to sexual risk, substance use, and victimization. Method: Participants were African American women living in public housing developments in Milwaukee, WI (N=245). Baseline ACASI interviews assessed individual [trauma history (physical abuse, sexual coercion)], and sociocultural [social support (SS), experience of community violence, sense of community] variables as they relate to substance use [SU: alcohol and drug problems, days use total], recent victimization, and sexual risk (proportion of unprotected to all vaginal sex occasions). Non-normally distributed data were transformed. We performed structural equation m...
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