HIV prevention

Speaking of Which, HIV and Other STI Rates Are Increasing With Age, Viagra Use

Tue, 2010-07-06 10:33

In a news roundup Robin Marty of RHRealityCheck.org passes along an interesting tidbit

Remember that whole argument that it’s ok to cover Viagra and not birth control because Viagra doesn’t run up other insurance costs?  Look who’s suddenly skyrocketing up the STI charts — sexual enhancements users.

Read the rest of the roundup here.

The information in the article (Business Week but pretty straightforward reporting) is more interesting, with a number of sensible but counterintuitive tidbits.

First, fairly predictably, people most likely to use Viagra, not to mention people who’s partners are likely to use it, are also likely to have come of age at a time when condom use was not widespread, in part because straight people back then relied on the Pill for contraception, and all known STIs were easily treated with antibiotics.

Less predictably, though, it turns out that STI rates for men who use Viagra tend to go up approximately a year before they start taking it, and actually levels off or drops a bit in the year after!

The risk of getting HIV in the year before taking the pills was 3.32 times higher in drug-takers and 3.19 times greater in the year after, compared with those not taking the pills, they said. Users of the medicines also had higher rates of chlamydia.

Source: Business Week

It’s not an insignificant problem, by the way. According to the article

[P]eople aged 40 to 49 accounted for the largest proportion of newly diagnosed HIV/AIDS cases, 27 percent, in 2007, according to the CDC. Those 50 to 59 accounted for 13 percent, while those over the age of 60 accounted for 4 percent.

I want to reinforce a conclusion from the original report and contained in the article as well: Sex education is just as important for people in their 40s and beyond as it is for those in their teens and 20s. Physicians should be strongly encouraged to in turn encourage patients who request drugs like Viagra to practice sexual safety.

Finally I’d like to stress, strongly, that one shouldn’t fall for gendered assumptions about who’s driving “promiscuity” among older people. I can’t put my finger on a link but I’m pretty sure I’ve posted links in the past that suggest up to half of hetero men who seek medication do so at the prompting of their partners. It’s certainly the case that most of the gendered behaviors evolutionary psychologists swear are “innate” or “evolved” turn out to be highly conditional on age and circumstance.

Finally! A Prudish Libertine Idea for Curbing HIV: Voluntary Universal Abstinence, Condom Use, or Masturbation For One Month

Tue, 2010-07-06 09:11

A genuinely novel but possibly doomed to failure idea for reducing the spread of HIV. It’s a good idea, an inexpensive one, one that’s worth trying, and one which could have astonishingly few side effects even if it didn’t work at all.

Unfortunately for the idea to be successful societies around the world would have to hop over an awful lot of cultural assumptions, social stereotypes, and hot-button vocabulary terms. It’s a wonderful idea that’s as likely to trigger “sex positive” progressives, “sex negative” social conservatives, free thinkers and the religious. Curious yet?

Oh, and it would only take a month.

Now are you curious?

The idea depends on three things epidemiologists have known since some time in the 1980s:

  • For such widespread disease HIV is actually surprisingly difficult to transmit sexually once it’s established in the body.
  • HIV is most contagious — 100 to 1000 times as infectious! — in the first month after infection.
  • HIV’s rate of new infection hovers at such a low level that even a very small drop in transmission could push it past its sustainability threshold and into decline!

So here’s the pitch as reported by Alex Duval Smith in The Guardian. Read it and see what if any cultural speed bumps bring you up short.

Leading scientists fighting the world’s worst Aids epidemic have called on African leaders to head a month-long sexual abstinence campaign, saying it would substantially reduce new infections.

Epidemiologists Alan Whiteside and Justin Parkhurst cite evidence that a newly infected person is most likely to transmit HIV in the month after being exposed to it. An abstinence campaign could cut new infections by up to 45%, they say – a huge step in countries such as South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Swaziland.

...

Whiteside’s research with Parkhurst, of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, focused on religious groups, such as Muslims who abstain from sex during Ramadan, and Zimbabwe’s Marange Apostolic sect, which bans sex during Passover.

...

Whiteside said a month-long pledge to use a condom could also be effective. “The main thing is to agree on a bounded period in which the entire population would live by the same rule,” he said.

...

Whiteside insists that a month-long campaign in his country, South Africa, is realistic. “We have this idea that we are going to put everyone on treatment. That is actually pretty fanciful. A month of abstinence or condom use is far less difficult to achieve.”

Read the quote in context here.

Cool huh? I mean seriously cool. HIV incidence is low among people who observe Ramadan and Lent compared to, well, comparable people who don’t. Ramadan and Lent both last a month. HIV is most infectious in the first month after which it remains infectious but at a much, much, much lower rate. If you could talk everyone in a population to abstain from fluid-contact sex just for a month you’d take a huge bite out of subsequent infections.

Do that just once and you could maybe/possibly/theoretically push the infection rate below sustainability. Do it once a year for a few years and you’d certainly put it on a path towards extinction!

Oh but there are a couple of catches, aren’t there? As I said above, you’d have to be pretty dispassionate not to let some of the buzzwords put you off altogether.

Abstinence? There go a ton of progressives and libertines. For only a month? There go all the social conservatives! It’s ok to use condoms (or, further crossing the line, masturbation) instead of complete abstinence? There even more conservatives. Based on observing Ramadan and Lent? There go all the free-thinkers. And even though the study took social conservatism into account (taking it into account would be the whole point driving the conclusions) it’s hard to look past stereotypes about the social conservatism of practitioners of Lent and Ramadan. And based on Ramadan? There go all the Christians and other religious faiths. Based on Lent? There go all the Moslems and other religious faiths. Based on research in Africa? You just lost the anti-colonialists, the colonialists, the racists, the anti-racists, and so on.

But…

But…

Assuming you could get past all the (in my opinion) unnecessary “buts” it’s by far the most practical, pragmatic, low-cost, and low-risk variation of a decades-old idea I’ve seen.

I mean, what’s the worst that could happen? Literally no one has ever died from abstaining from sex for a month. Even better, nobody’s ever died from using a condom for a month instead of abstaining completely. Even better, nobody’s ever died from masturbating instead of having fluid-contact and/or barrier-method sex for a month.

If some people cheated, the way all but the very most pious often do during Lent or Ramadan, the population benefit would be reduced, sure, but there’d still be some benefit.

What I particularly like about it, though, is that the same biases that make people balk could be turned to advantage.

  • People who are inclined to be religious could think of it as a religious thing.
  • People inclined to be kinky/libidinous could think of it as an alt-sex thing.
  • People inclined to be merely pragmatic could think of it as a pragmatic thing.
  • People inclined to self-sacrifice could think of it as a self-denial thing.
  • People inclined to be scientific could think of it as a grand experiment (where in human subject terms participation is almost necessarily voluntary!)
  • People inclined to novelty could enjoy the novelty of the situation!
  • Scolds and meddlers could contribute to encouraging participation.
  • Bloggers and Twitterers could post and tweet their experiences, their alternatives, their encouraging words, and, I think most importantly, could contribute heavily to the “countdown” effect (e.g. “Just 10 more days!” “Just 5 more days!”)

Pretty much worst possible outcome would be… we’d have wasted a relatively small amount of money and time, given up a relatively small amount of fluid-contact sex, and HIV rates would stay right where they are.

Call me a prudish libertine but I think it’s brilliant.

Via Tyler Cowen of Marginal Revolution.

Religion, Culture, Circumcision, and HIV Prevention

Tue, 2009-08-25 23:10

Speaking of ethnic and cultural ignorance while thinking about the audacity of dope among so-called “birthers” who imagine that President Obama would be uncircumcised if he had secretly been born to Muslim parents in Kenya, Indonesia, or for that matter Hawaii I started wondering if the statistics being used by the CDC to recommend universal circumcision demonstrated real biological differences or only cultural/religious behavioral ones.

Because while it might be great if the mechanical act of being circumcised reduced one’s risk of acquiring HIV from unprotected sex. It would be kind of… unfortunate if being culturally and religiously Jewish, Muslim, Protestant Christian, or one of the much smaller subcultures worldwide that emphasize circumcision and… a lot of other hygiene, monogamy or fidelity-related, and discouraged use of alcohol and injection drugs.

I don’t know. But I’d probably want to find out before I endorsed or bitterly mocked proposals of universal circumcision to prevent contracting HIV. Or, for that matter before I endorsed or mocked proposals for universal adoption of Judeo/Christian/Islamic conventions.

Or said “who needs condoms if I’m already circumcised.” Which I suspect is what vast numbers of men are likely to say should the recommendation come down.

(Just to be clear I don’t know if social correlations have been made. But do I want to know.)

Abstience vs. education

Thu, 2007-09-27 13:34

Kate Sheppard of TAPPED reposts some interesting information that goes against any number of classic social-conservative assumptions about race, class, income, and promiscuity.

Foreign Policy has an infographic in this month’s issue about sex, and safe sex, around the world. Seems the number of sexual partners grows with income; people in low-income countries average 6.3 partners, while high-income countries average 9.7. People in high-income nations also have sex earlier, and are more likely to have unprotected sex – with nations like Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Australia and New Zealand at the head of the pack. Also, Icelanders and Germans lose their virginity earliest, and your sexual preference isn’t a very likely determinant of whether or not you use protection. The info comes from the world’s largest survey of sexual behavior, conducted by Durex (the condom purveyor). Fascinating.

She said it here.

Dana Goldstein, also of TAPPED, adds a brilliant point

What strikes me about the sex statistics you cite, Kate, is that they really upturn the stereotype that promiscuity is primarily responsible for the spread of HIV/AIDS in the developing world. Indeed, in Zimbabwe, for example, women’s access to prenatal care is a stronger determinant of a population group’s HIV infection rate than the prevalence of prostitution. Educating women and giving them comprehensive reproductive health care is one of the very best ways to fight AIDS.

And she said it here.

Nuts and bolts of reproductive education and heathcare basics aren’t as, um, sexy as fulminating about, say, abstience, but it’s a better use of aid dollars. (And really, if someone wants to go squandering money on abstinence education it looks like Sweden, Iceland, and Germany have the biggest “crisis” in non-abstienence. And look how their societies are just falling apart! Oh yeah, and if you look at that Foreign Policy infographic, what’s up with Turkey?)

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