Concurrence and selection of sexual partners as predictors of condom use among Mexican indigenous migrant workers

Concurrencia y selección de parejas sexuales como predictores del uso de condón en trabajadores migrantes indígenas mexicanos

Jose R. Caballero-Hoyos Joel Monárrez-Espino About the authors

ABSTRACT

Objective

To identify if the selection of mixed sexual partners and the existence of concurrent partners are predictors of condom use in indigenous migrant agricultural workers from Colima, Mexico.

Methods

Analytical cross-sectional study using an egocentric sexual network approach. Community interviewers applied a structured questionnaire to 192 indigenous migrant workers in a sugarcane agro-industrial context. Data were analyzed with binary logistic regression; odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI 95%) were estimated.

Results

In the logistic regression model, adjusted odds (OR; 95% CI) of steady condom use were lower within partnerships of the same indigenous ethnicity compared to other partnerships (0.30; 0.17-0.53), partnerships that were concurrent to other partnerships (0.27; 0.15-0.50), and partnerships that used illegal drugs during sex to other partnerships (0.23; 0.11-0.49). Those variables were actually associated with increased risk of unprotected sex (occasionally or never using condoms), and therefore exposures were unprotected.

Conclusion

Sexual partners of the same ethnicity, concurrent partnerships and partnerships that use illegal drugs favor the low frequency of constant condom use and, in turn, the vulnerability to STIs and HIV transmission in indigenous migrant agricultural workers.

Key Words:
Condoms; indigenous population; sexual partners; transients and migrants; young adult (source: MeSH, NLM)

RESUMEN

Objetivo

Identificar si la selección de parejas sexuales mixtas y la existencia de parejas concurrentes son predictores del uso de condón en trabajadores agrícolas migrantes indígenas de Colima, México.

Métodos

Estudio transversal analítico bajo un enfoque egocéntrico de redes de parejas sexuales. Entrevistadores comunitarios aplicaron un cuestionario estructurado a 192 trabajadores migrantes indígenas de un contexto agroindustrial cañero. Los datos se analizaron mediante regresión logística binaria; se calcularon razones de momios (RM) e intervalos de confianza (IC) de 95%.

Resultados

En el modelo de regresión de predictores del uso constante de condón, las RM ajustadas (RM; IC 95%) fueron: menores en las parejas sexuales de la misma etnicidad que en las otras parejas (0.30; 0.17-0.53), menores en las parejas concurrentes que en las no concurrentes (0.27; 0.15-0.50); y menores en las parejas usuarias de drogas ilegales que en las no usuarias (0.23; 0.11-0.49). El sentido predictor de estas variables se asoció a un mayor riesgo de sexo no protegido (algunas veces o nunca usaron condón).

Conclusión

Las parejas sexuales de la misma etnicidad, las parejas concurrentes y las parejas que usan drogas ilegales favorecen una baja frecuencia de uso constante del condón y con ello la vulnerabilidad a la transmisión de ITS y VIH en los trabajadores agrícolas migrantes indígenas.

Palabras Clave:
Condones; población indígena; parejas sexuales; migrantes; adulto joven (fuente: DeCS, BIREME)

Health conditions in migrant agricultural workers (MAW) in low-income settings are characterized by high levels of morbidity and mortality, being mental disorders, drug abuse, sexually transmitted infections (STI), and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection common public health problems 11. Kelly N, Glick D, Kulbok P, Clayton L, Rovnyak V. Health status of migrant farmworkers in the Shenandoah Valley. J Community Health Nurs. 2012; 29(4):214-224..

MAWS are vulnerable to STIS and HIV infection due to poor living conditions, labor exploitation, lack of social support, risky behaviors (e.g. multiple sexual partners, use of illegal drugs, and condomless sexual intercourse), and limited access to basic preventive services 22. Weine SM, Kashuba AB. Labor migration and HIV risk: A systematic review of the literature. AIDS Behav. 2012; 16(6):1605-21..

Sexual risk practices in MAWS leading to STI and HIV infection are associated with poverty and segregation, especially in Latin American indigenous populations with poor information about these diseases. Among these groups, the use of alcohol and drugs is also common; sexual violence and social stigma that lead to feelings of resistance, or beliefs that deter preventive measures such as the use of condoms, are also prevalent 33. Bastos F, Cáceres C, Galvao J, Veras MA, Castilho EA. AIDS in Latin America: assessing the current status of the epidemic and the ongoing response. Int J Epidemiol. 2008; 37(4):729-37..

In Mexican indigenous MAWS, the spread of STIS and HIV is associated with a change of lifestyle after migrating to the United States or to domestic agro-industrial locations. While travelling, workers engage in unsafe sexual practices with infected partners in environments with limited access to health care 44. Albarran C, Nyamathi A. HIV and Mexican migrant workers in the United States: A review applying the vulnerable populations' conceptual model. J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care. 2011; 22(3):173-85.,55. Magis C, Lemp G, Hernández MT, Sánchez MA, Estrada F, Bravo-García E. Going north: Mexican migrants and their vulnerability to HIV. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2009; 51(suppl 1):21-5..

Studies on STIS and HIV rates in Mexican indigenous maw are still limited and tend to underreport cases. This is largely due to the marginalization and social exclusion conditions prevailing during their seasonal migratory experience 66. Rhodes SD, Bischoff WE, Burnell JM, Whalley LE, Walkup MP, Vallejos QM, et al. HIV and sexually transmitted disease risk among male Hispanic/Latino migrant farmworkers in the Southeast: Findings from a pilot CBPR study. Am J Ind Med. 2013; 53(10):976-83.. The 0.29% and 0.11% prevalence of STIS and HIV/AIDS, respectively, reported in 2014 among MAWS in the United States can be used as an approximation to illustrate the epidemiological impact, as nearly 90% were Hispanic migrants, mostly Mexicans, of which a third had indigenous origin 77. The National Center for Farmworker Health. Regional migrant health profile, 2014. An analysis of migrant & seasonal agricultural worker patients. Los Angeles, CA: NCFH; 2016. Available from: Available from: https://goo.gl/VUSNAF . Accessed 29 July 2016.
https://goo.gl/VUSNAF...
. While there is no accurate information about the prevalence of these diseases among indigenous MAW in Mexico, exploratory data suggest that it could be higher than the national average, and that both epidemics may interact 88. Magis C, Bravo E, Gayet C, Rivera P, De Luca M. Vulnerabilidad de la población indígena. In: Magis C (editor). El VIH y el SIDA en México al 2008. Hallazgos, tendencias y reflexiones. México DF: CENSIDA; 2008. pp. 54-9..

Network of sexual partners and the spread of infections

In the social network framework, sexual relationships are conceived as the physical interaction of two or more individuals within a sociocultural context that regulates its dynamic. If such relations are grouped, they constitute a network of sex partners that can spread infections. Thus, one infected person can pass on a disease to a susceptible sex partner disseminating the infection to an extent that depends on the number of partners of the infected individual, and the new partners of recently infected partners 99. Adimora AA, Schoenbach VJ. Social determinants of sexual networks, partnership formation, and sexually transmitted infections. In: Aral SO, Fenton KA, Lipshutz JA (editors). The new Public Health and STD/HIV prevention. Personal, Public and Health Systems approaches. New York/London: Springer/Heilderberg Dordrecht; 2013. pp. 13-32..

In the traditional sexual network analysis, the risk of STIS and HIV infection is constrained by people's position within the social structure. Therefore, local (egocentric) and global (sociometric) structures become determinants of the risk of infection 1010. Ghani AC, Garnett GP. Risks of acquiring and transmitting sexually transmitted diseases in sexual partner networks. Sex Transm Dis. 2000; 27(10):579-87.. The two local structures needed to understand the transmission of STIS and HIV within the context of a network of sex partners include the mixed selection of partners and concurrent partners.

The mixed selection of partners implies two alternatives: 1) choosing sexual partners from close or assortative networks (e.g. partners of the same ethnicity), or 2) from external or disassortative networks (e.g. different ethnicity partners or non-indigenous partners). The rationale behind this model relates to the type of partner selection, which will impact the transmission of the infection based on condomless sexual intercourse. Consequently, if selection is assortative, it will lead to higher infection rates in a community, in contrast with disassortative selection, which will function as a bridge for the transmission of infections across communities exposed to different risk levels 1111. Hertog S. Heterosexual behavior patterns and the spread of HIV/AIDS: The interacting effects of rate of partner change and sexual mixing. Sex Transm Dis. 2007; 34(10):820-28..

A classic finding regarding the transmission of STIS in assortative indigenous networks was documented in 1998 when analyzing the contact tracing system of 4 544 infected people and their sexual partners in Manitoba, Canada 1212. Wylie JL, Jolly A. Patterns of Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Infection in Sexual Networks in Manitoba, Canada. Sex Transm Dis. 2001; 28(1):14-24.. It was found that indigenous networks were made of sex couples with a linear structure (i.e. frequent change of partners and a high number of couples) and ethnic assortativity, resulting in high rates of syphilis and gonorrhea within the same community, contrasting with non-indigenous people that conformed radial networks, fewer number of couples, and lower STI rates.

Concurrent partnerships imply having simultaneous partnerships leading to direct or indirect relations among partners connected to the same sexual network, increasing the risk of infection for the partners, but not for the index case; therefore, the presence of concurrence is expected to speed up the non-linear transmission of infections 1313. Mah TL, Halperin DT. Concurrent sexual partnerships and the HIV epidemics in Africa: evidence to move forward. AIDS Behav. 2010; 14(1):11-16..

Sub-Saharan Africa is a drastic example of how the high prevalence of concurrent sexual partnerships has led to the largest regional epidemic of HIV/AIDS. Differences in levels of sexual partnership concurrence between various racial or ethnic groups could explain the HIV epidemic seen in the black South African population 1414. Kenyon C, Dlamini S, Boulle A, White RG, Badri M. A network-level explanation for the differences in HIV prevalence in South Africa's racial groups. Afr J AIDS Res. 2009; 8(3):243-54..

The combination of both factors (i.e. assortative selection of sex partners and concurrence) can further increase the prevalence of STIS and HIV, as is the case among young people in Afro-American communities of the United States, where a high proportion of assortative and concurrent sexual partnerships leads to a high prevalence of HIV 1515. Morris M, Kurth AE, Hamilton DT, Moody J, Wakefield S. Concurrent partnerships and HIV prevalence disparities by race: linking science and public health practice. Am J Public Health. 2009; 99(6):1023-1031..

Network of sex partners and condom use among MAWs

Studies on MAWS have reported various associations between the structure of sexual partnerships and the use of condom in the context of labor mobility:

a) .MAWS increase their sexual activity, get involved with different types of partners, and have low frequency of condom use 1616. Yang X, Derlega VJ, Luo H. Migration, behaviour change and HIV/STD risks in China. AIDS Care. 2007; 19(2):282-8.; however, condom use is higher with casual partners and sex workers than with primary partners 1717. Rizwan SA, Kant S, Goswami K, Rai SK, Misra P. Correlates of intention to use condom among male migrant factory workers in Northern India. J Clin Diagn Res. 2014; 8(8):5-8..

b) .MAWS have an increased interaction with sex partners exposed to higher risks of infections in social environments where drug abuse is frequent, as well as to STIS and HIV in locations with poor access to preventive services 1818. Saggurti N, Verma RK, Jain A, RamaRao S, Kumar KA, Subbiah A, et al. HIV risk behaviours among contracted and non-contracted male migrant workers in India: Potential role of labour contractors and contractual systems in HIV prevention. AIDS. 2008; 22(suppl 5):127-136..

c) .MAWS tend to form assortative sex partnerships where condom use is rare, especially if drug use is involved 1919. Shehadeh N, McCoy VH. Risky sexual behaviors: The role of ethnic Identity in HIV risk in migrant workers. J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care. 2014; 25(4):330-40..

d) .MAWS are less likely to form concurrent partnerships where unprotected sex predominates 2020. Westercamp N, Mattson CL, Madonia M, Moses S, Agot K, Ndinya-Achola JO, et al. Determinants of consistent condom use vary by partner type among young men in Kisumu, Kenya: A multi-level data analysis. AIDS Behav. 2010; 14(4):949-59..

In the light of the existing literature, this study aimed at identifying if mixed sexual partner selection, based on ethnicity, and the concurrence of sex partners were independent predictors of condom use among indigenous migrant workers in an agro-industrial Mexican context. If such is the case, these workers and their sex partners could be more vulnerable to the transmission of STIS and HIV.

The use of condom is emphasized here, as it is the most important method to prevent the transmission of STIS and HIV 2121. Crosby RA. State of condom use in HIV prevention science and practice. Curr HIV/AIDS Rep. 2013; 10(1):59-64., and the most accessible for indigenous populations, which are usual beneficiaries of preventive campaigns of the Mexican health sector.

METHODS

This was an analytical cross-sectional study that used an egocentric approach to sexual networks. In this approach, the index subject (individual A or ego) names his or her sex partners (individuals B, C, D or alters) and provides information of behaviors and attributes for each of them, thus characterizing subject A's personal or egocentric sex network (no data was collected from the partners themselves). In epidemiological terms, egocentric risk-prone networks are potential sources of infections. Thus, the effects of large-scale sex networks on individuals occur partially through their immediate sex partners 2222. Friedman SR, Aral S. Social Networks, Risk-Potential Networks, Health, and Disease. J Urban Health. 2001; 78(3):411-8..

Participants and setting

A total of 192 indigenous MAWS were interviewed. They were active workers during the sugarcane harvest of the year 2011 in the Cuauhtémoc municipality, State of Colima, in western Mexico, where they have been employed in the production of cane sugar since the 1960s 2323. Luna-Zamora R. A la vera del camino. Tránsito, incorporación y narrativa de la historia del municipio de Cuauhtémoc. Colima, México: Gobierno del Estado de Colima; 2000.. Workers come from marginalized areas of the southern states of Guerrero, Oaxaca and Chiapas, where the incidence of AIDS is higher than the national average 2424. Centro Nacional para la Prevención y el Control del VIH/SIDA. Vigilancia Epidemiológica de casos de VIH/SIDA en México. Registro Nacional de Casos de SIDA. México DF: CENSIDA ; 2015. Available from: Available from: www.censida.salud.gob.mx/descargas . Accessed 29 july 2016.
www.censida.salud.gob.mx/descargas...
.

Interviewees were selected from a census of indigenous maws and their families. They lived in one of the four laborer shelters situated in the localities of Cobano, Trapiche and Quesería. Residents comprised 941 individuals, including 480 male workers, of which 213 fulfilled the following inclusion criteria: being a sexually active Nahua or Amuzgo male aged 18-29 years, employed as MAW for at least three harvest years, who lived in a sugarcane boarding facility of the Cuauhtémoc municipality. This age range was chosen as most maws were young adult men, who started their sex life at age 13-14 on average. The 3-year criterion of migratory experience assumed cumulative sex practices of risk in various working environments. Exclusion criteria involved being unable to speak in Spanish during the interview due to lack of knowledge, or to alcohol or illicit drug consumption.

Workers were contacted in the shelters and asked to participate. From 213 eligible people, 192 interviews were conducted; 12 did not speak Spanish, five had used alcohol or illicit drugs, and four refused to participate, resulting in a refusal rate of 1.8%. No women were included due to the small number of working females (n=5), and because of the high social control of their male partners within the boarding premises.

Data collection

Data was collected between March and June 2011. Community health interviewers administered a structured questionnaire in Spanish with the assistance of a trained indigenous educator, who built rapport with interviewees and helped answering questions and concerns. The interviewers, who were well-known for their preventive work in the community, were trained in the administration of the egocentric network instrument. This helped achieving a positive response from maws when approaching sex topics. Interviews were conducted in private areas of the shelter, and lasted 25 minutes on average (range 18-29).

Participants were informed about the objectives, risks and benefits of the study. Participation was voluntary and written consent was obtained. All interviews were confidential and anonymous. Participants were given preventive information about sex counseling and reproductive health services. The study was approved by the Local Research Committee of the Mexican Institute of Social Security in the State of Colima (register number R-2010-601-2).

Questionnaire and variables

The validated and adapted version of the UNAIDS structured questionnaire (United Nations' tool for tracing sexual networks) was used 2525. United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS. Looking deeper into the HIV epidemic: A questionnaire for tracing sexual networks. Geneva: UNAIDS; 1998. Available from: Available from: https://goo.gl/sDLreY . Accessed 12 may 2016.
https://goo.gl/sDLreY...
. This instrument contains 40 items distributed into four sections: attributes of socio-demographic workers (age, ethnicity, marital status, education, occupation, religion and migration experience), anonymous listing of up to eight sexual partners within the last year prior to the interview, socio-demographic attributes of the sex partners (age, mix selection by ethnicity, sex, marital status, schooling, main occupation and type of partner), and characteristics of the sexual intercourse with partners (concurrence, frequency of condom use, alcohol and illegal drug use frequencies during sexual intercourse, and coital frequency).

Data management and analysis

Egocentric sexual network data can be analyzed using the subjects' attributes as well as sets of relationships. Data was organized using a matrix where rows corresponded to workers and columns to attributes of workers, partners and sexual relationships. The matrix was converted into a dyadic format where rows were transposed into columns, allowing analyses of combined attributes of workers (n=192) and sex partners (n=360). This format was used for relational analyses between attributes of the workers and those of their sex partners. The conversion was done using the software for the analyses of egocentric networks E-NET V.0.024 2626. Halgin DS, Borgatti SP. An Introduction to personal network analysis and tie churn statistics using E-NET. University of Kentucky: Lexington, KY; 2012. Available from: Available from: https://goo.gl/pToz3V . Accessed 31 december 2015.
https://goo.gl/pToz3V...
; the resulting matrix was exported to SPSS v.20 for statistical analyses.

Pearson Chi2 tests were used to identify differences in proportions between nominal data. Student t-tests and ANOVA were used for mean differences between groups in normally distributed variables, and Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis non-parametric tests for those not normally distributed. P values below 0.05 were considered statistically significant.

Factors associated with the steady use of condom were identified using binary logistic regression: unadjusted odds ratios (OR) and adjusted or with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were computed.

Steady use of condom, dichotomously defined 2727. Noar SM, Cole C, Carlyle K. Condom use measurement in 56 studies of sexual risk behavior: Review and recommendations. Arch Sex Behav. 2006; 35(3):327-45., was the dependent variable. Mixed selection of sex partners by ethnicity 2828. Van Veen MG, Kramer MA, Op de Coul ELM, van Leeuwen AP, de Zwart O, van de Laart MJW, et al. Disassortative sexual mixing among migrant populations in the Netherlands: a potential for HIV/STI transmission? AIDS Care. 2009; 21(6):683-91., presence of concurrent partnerships 1313. Mah TL, Halperin DT. Concurrent sexual partnerships and the HIV epidemics in Africa: evidence to move forward. AIDS Behav. 2010; 14(1):11-16., frequency of drug use during sex, and number of partners were independent variables. Variables were included in the model based on marginal statistical significance seen in bivariate analyses (p<0.10). Operational definitions can be seen in Table 1.

Table 1
Operational definitions and coding of variables included in the binary logistic regression analysis

Model fit was assessed using the Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test; a good model was indicated by a non-significant Chi2 value (p>0.05). The magnitude of the variance inflation factor (VIF) was used to explore co-llinearity across independent variables; multicollinearity was defined when VIF values were above 3. Nagelkerke pseudo-R2 was used to determine the proportion of the variability explained by the model.

RESULTS

Characteristics of indigenous migrant workers and their sex partners

A total of 80.2% of the respondents belonged to the Nahua ethnicity, and the remaining 19.8% were Amuzgo. Mean age was 23.7 years (range 16-29); 64.5% were married or cohabiting (33.3% single, 2.1% divorced); 78.1% had primary school education or less (21.9% secondary school), and 65.6% were Catholics (13.5% non-Catholic Christians, 20.8% no religion). Within the last three years, 63.5% had migrant labor experience in Mexico, and 19.8% in agricultural fields from the United States.

Workers reported 360 sex partners (mean 2.3), from which 99.4% were women (mean age 22.5 years); 74.8% had primary education or less; 55.1% were married; 38.9% worked at home without salary; 64.5% were indigenous from the same ethnic group of the worker; 20.5% belonged to other groups, and 15.0% were non-indigenous.

Table 2 presents sociodemographic characteristics by ethnicity of sex partnerships. Nearly half of the partners were married when belonging to either the same (47.5%) or another (45.9%) ethnic group compared with 18.5% of non-indigenous partners. Education was similar for indigenous partners (comparisons were not possible for non-indigenous, as data was lacking in 59.3%). Most non-indigenous partners were sex workers (70.4%), compared with 2.6% and 13.5% of partners of similar and different ethnicity, respectively. Casual sex partners were more common with non-indigenous (77.8%) than with indigenous partners (same 27.6%, other ethnicity 43.2%). Mean partner's age was similar across groups, ranging from 21.9 in partners of the same ethnic group to 23.7 among those from another.

Table 2
Comparison of selected characteristics of sex partners in indigenous migrant workers by ethnicity

Sex behavior of indigenous maws by ethnicity of their sex partners

Table 3 shows that sexual concurrence (simultaneous existence of sexual partnerships) occurred almost exclusively among indigenous partners, with 20.7% belonging to the same ethnic group, 21.6% to a different ethnic group and 3.7% to the non-indigenous group. The proportion of steady use of condom was higher in non-indigenous partners (29.6%) than in indigenous partners (7.8% same and 13.5% different ethnicity). Alcohol and illicit drug use during sex tended to be higher in non-indigenous partners than among indigenous partners. The mean number of sex partners reported by the worker during the year prior to the interview was also higher in non-indigenous than among indigenous partners regardless of ethnicity (4.6% vs. 2.3%, p<0.001). Finally, the monthly median number of sexual relationships was higher among indigenous than in non-indigenous partners (p<0.005).

Table 3
Sexual behavior of indigenous migrant workers by ethnicity of their sexual partners

Factors associated with the steady use of condom

Table 4 shows the logistic regression model. Adjusted ORS (CI 95%) for steady condom use were lower within partnerships of same indigenous ethnicity (assortative) than in other partnerships (0.30; 0.17-0.53), in partnerships that were concurrent to other partnerships (0.27; 0.15-0.50), and in partnerships that used illegal drugs during sex to other partnerships (0.23; 0.11-0.49). Consequently, assortative partnerships, concurrent partnerships and illegal drug use were associated with increased risk (occasionally or never using condoms), and therefore exposures were unprotected. The unadjusted positive effect for the number of sex partners was lost in the adjusted analysis. The model fit well (p=0.26) and VIF was 1.21, indicating no collinearity. The final model explained 19% of the total variability.

Table 4
Logistic regression models of factors associated with the steady use of condom during sexual intercourse by indigenous migrant workers with their partners

DISCUSSION

The adjusted ors for steady condom use were lower in sexual partnerships that were assortative and concurrent than in other partnerships and in those that used illegal drugs during sex.

Our findings support the proposed link between assortativeness and concurrence with the vulnerability to STI s and HIV infection mentioned in the sexual network theory. By hindering the constant use of condom, these variables contribute to a faster transmission and accumulation of infections in the indigenous community, speeding up the non-linear transmission of infections 1111. Hertog S. Heterosexual behavior patterns and the spread of HIV/AIDS: The interacting effects of rate of partner change and sexual mixing. Sex Transm Dis. 2007; 34(10):820-28.,2020. Westercamp N, Mattson CL, Madonia M, Moses S, Agot K, Ndinya-Achola JO, et al. Determinants of consistent condom use vary by partner type among young men in Kisumu, Kenya: A multi-level data analysis. AIDS Behav. 2010; 14(4):949-59.,2929. Schneider JA, Saluja GS, Oruganti G, Dass S, Tolentino J, Laumann EO, et al. HIV infection dynamics in rural Andhra Pradesh south India: A sexual-network analysis exploratory study. AIDS Care. 2007; 19(9):1171-6..

The use of illegal drugs also hindered the steady use of condom. This coincides with earlier studies on maws who migrated to agro-industrial environments where the use of drugs is prevalent 3030. Wilson KS, Eggleston E, Diaz-Olavarrieta C, García SG. HIV/STI risk among male Mexican immigrants in Dallas, Texas: findings from a pilot study. J Immigr Minor Health. 2010; 12(6):947-51., inciting workers to start using drugs or to increase their consumption.

The associations found can be interpreted as the expression of a sexual culture strongly influenced by a context of marginalization and extreme poverty, which in the case of Mexican indigenous maws, is characterized by very precarious working and living conditions with high rates of morbidity, mortality, violence, and drug abuse, as well as limited access to health and education 3131. Secretaría de Desarrollo Social. Diagnóstico del Programa de Atención a Jornaleros Agrícolas. México DF: SEDESOL; 2010.. These conditions enable the development of networks of sexual partnerships that incur in risky practices that lead to STIS and HIV vulnerability, as it has also been reported among migrant workers worldwide 22. Weine SM, Kashuba AB. Labor migration and HIV risk: A systematic review of the literature. AIDS Behav. 2012; 16(6):1605-21..

The lower proportion of steady use of condom with indigenous sex partners also coincides with the lower frequency seen among young indigenous groups from Latin America, stressing the higher vulnerability of indigenous people compared with the general population 3232. Organización Panamericana de la Salud/Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe. Salud de la población joven indígena en América Latina: un panorama general. Santiago: OPS/CEPAL; 2011.. This has also been reflected in a higher prevalence of infections in global indigenous populations 3333. Minichiello V, Rahman S, Hussain R. Epidemiology of sexually transmitted infections in global indigenous populations: data availability and gaps. Int J STD AIDS. 2013; 24(10):759-68..

Various limitations should be stressed: 1) the cross-sectional design used limited the assessment of partnership formation and the trends in condom use during sex practices, which can only be assessed using longitudinal designs; 2) the use of structured questionnaires for interviews could have led to bias and measurement errors when estimating the characteristics of sex practices, including the limit to eight sex partners to reduce inaccurate recall and participant fatigue; this was reduced by using a validated and pilot-tested instrument and by training the interviewers; 3) since the study was limited to young male workers, future efforts should be made to explore the perspective of minorities in this sector, namely women, older adults, and seniors, possibly using qualitative methodologies; 4) in the interviewed group, only two workers referred having male sex partners; this could be an underestimation of the true proportion of same sex relationships resulting from a response bias given the homophobic attitudes prevalent in the Mexican indigenous sexual culture, which can be associated with fear of discrimination and violence for having partners of the same sex 3434. Nuñez-Noriega G. Vidas vulnerables. Hombres indígenas, diversidad sexual y VIH. México DF: CIAD-EDAMEX; 2009., therefore, risk practices in men who have sex with other men need to be further investigated; 5) steady use of condom was dichotomously coded to obtain a robust indicator of consistent use; however, this measure should be further complemented with questions dealing with adequacy of use; 6) the variable "concurrence" focused on workers' reports on simultaneous sexual partnerships within the last year as an approximation to the risk of transmission in the partner, yet this measure could be improved using other two complementary measures: perceived concurrence among regular partners, and perceived concurrence based on temporal duration; and 7) findings cannot be generalized to other populations, as the study only dealt with asugarcane agro-industrial context and two ethnic groups, while the real population of migrant workers comprises many indigenous groups; thus, results can only be extrapolated to workers of similar ethnic, migration, social, and working characteristics.

In spite of the limitations, the study concludes that two egocentric sex network variables (assortative and concurrent partnerships) favor the low frequency of steady condom use, increasing the vulnerability of STIS and HIV transmission. The negative impact of illegal drug use, which appears to be growing among indigenous MAWS, needs to be considered.

In terms of preventive actions targeted to indigenous MAWS, these results could lead to the implementation of STIS and HIV risk reduction measures using complementary schemes through a structural approach aimed at improving socioeconomic and sanitary conditions in working places, including access to intercultural services of sexual, reproductive and mental health 3535. Gupta GR, Parkhurst JO, Ogden JA, Aggleton P, Mahal A. Structural approaches to HIV prevention. Lancet. 2008; 372(9640):764-75., and by developing culturally-contextualized preventive strategies for condom use in partners with assortative and concurrent sexual partnerships 1515. Morris M, Kurth AE, Hamilton DT, Moody J, Wakefield S. Concurrent partnerships and HIV prevalence disparities by race: linking science and public health practice. Am J Public Health. 2009; 99(6):1023-1031.

Acknowledgments:

The authors would like to thank the indigenous community for their kind participation in the study.

REFERENCES

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    Weine SM, Kashuba AB. Labor migration and HIV risk: A systematic review of the literature. AIDS Behav. 2012; 16(6):1605-21.
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    Bastos F, Cáceres C, Galvao J, Veras MA, Castilho EA. AIDS in Latin America: assessing the current status of the epidemic and the ongoing response. Int J Epidemiol. 2008; 37(4):729-37.
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    Albarran C, Nyamathi A. HIV and Mexican migrant workers in the United States: A review applying the vulnerable populations' conceptual model. J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care. 2011; 22(3):173-85.
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    Magis C, Lemp G, Hernández MT, Sánchez MA, Estrada F, Bravo-García E. Going north: Mexican migrants and their vulnerability to HIV. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2009; 51(suppl 1):21-5.
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    Rhodes SD, Bischoff WE, Burnell JM, Whalley LE, Walkup MP, Vallejos QM, et al. HIV and sexually transmitted disease risk among male Hispanic/Latino migrant farmworkers in the Southeast: Findings from a pilot CBPR study. Am J Ind Med. 2013; 53(10):976-83.
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  • Conflict of interests:
    None

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    May-Jun 2018

History

  • Received
    29 June 2017
  • Reviewed
    16 Aug 2017
  • Accepted
    20 Jan 2018
Instituto de Salud Publica, Facultad de Medicina - Universidad Nacional de Colombia Bogotá - DF - Colombia
E-mail: revistasp_fmbog@unal.edu.co