Racial/ethnic differences in the rates and correlates of HIV risk behaviors among drug abusers.

HIV infection disproportionately impacts minorities, yet research on racial/ethnic differences in the prevalence and correlates of HIV risk behaviors is limited. This study examined racial/ethnic differences in the rates of HIV risk behaviors and whether the relationship between HIV risk factors and HIV risk behaviors varies by race/ethnicity in clients participating in National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trial Network (CTN) trials. The sample was 41% non-Hispanic White, 32% non-Hispanic Black, and 27% Hispanic (N = 2,063). HIV risk behaviors and measures of substance and psychosocial HIV risk factors in the past month were obtained. Non-Hispanic Blacks engaged in less HIV sexual risk behaviors overall than non-Hispanic Whites. While non-Hispanic Whites were the most likely to report any injection drug use, Hispanics engaged in the most HIV drug risk behaviors. Specific risk factors were differentially predictive of HIV risk behavior by race/ethnicity. Alcohol use severity was related to engaging in higher sex risk behaviors for non-Hispanic Blacks and Whites. Greater psychiatric severity was related to engaging in higher sex risk behaviors for non-Hispanic Whites. Drug use severity was associated with engaging in higher risk drug behaviors for non-Hispanic Whites and Hispanics, with the magnitude of the relationship stronger for Hispanics.

Conclusions: The findings from the present study suggest that there is a context in which HIV high risk behaviors occur within racial/ethnic groups as well as differences in the presence of risk factors associated with engaging in those behaviors. These findings are consistent with calls to culturally adapt evidence-based interventions and the need to maintain core elements of the intervention when adapting the intervention for increased relevance to the new targets. Further research testing HIV risk prevention interventions within racial/ethnic groups is needed to identify target behaviors or risk factors that are salient to inform HIV interventions.

Related protocols: CTN-0001, CTN-0002, CTN-0004, CTN-0005, CTN-0006, CTN-0007, CTN-0021

Categories: African Americans, Alcohol, Condom use, CTN platform/ancillary study, Hispanics and Latinos, HIV/AIDS, Injection drug use, Minority groups, Sexual risk behavior, Sexually transmitted diseases
Tags: Article (Peer-Reviewed)
Authors: Brooks, Audrey J.; Lokhnygina, Yuliya; Meade, Christina S.; Potter, Jennifer Sharpe; Calsyn, Donald A.; Greenfield, Shelly F.
PMCID: PMC3576857
PMID: 23414499
Source: American Journal on Addictions 2013;22(2):136-147. [doi: 10.1111/j.1521-0391.2013.00303.x]