Alcohol consumption and high risk sexual behavior among female sex workers in Uganda

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Date
2014Author
Mbonye, Martin
Rutakumwa, Rwamahe
Weiss, Helen
Seeley, Janet
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sex workers. We explored the drivers of alcohol consumption and its relationship to high risk sexual behaviour.
Participants were drawn from a cohort of 1 027 women selected from ‘hot spots’ in the suburbs of Kampala city.
We conducted 3 in-depth interviews with 40 female sex workers between 2010 and 2011. Data were analysed
thematically, focusing on alcohol use within the context of sex work. Alcohol consumption was very high with only
seven women reporting that they did not drink. Alcohol consumption was driven by the emotional and economic
needs of the participants, but also promoted by clients who encouraged consumption. Many sex workers only
started drinking alcohol when they joined sex work on the advice of more experienced peers, as a way to cope with
the job. Alcohol was blamed for unsafe sex, acts of violence and poor decision making which increased sexual and
physical violence. Alcohol was reported to affect medication adherence for HIV-positive women who forgot to take
medicine. The findings suggest that the drivers of alcohol consumption are multifaceted in this group and require
both individual and structural interventions. Alcohol reduction counselling can be supportive at the individual level
and should be an integral part of HIV prevention programmes for female sex workers and others such as patrons in
bars. The counselling should be addressed in a sensitive manner to bar owners and managers.
URI
https://doi.org/10.2989/16085906.2014.927779https://nru.uncst.go.ug/xmlui/handle/123456789/2821
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- Social Sciences [1244]