พฤติกรรมการมีเพศสัมพันธ์ที่ไม่ปลอดภัยกับประสบการณ์ปฏิเสธการมีเพศสัมพันธ์ที่ไม่ปลอดภัย ในคู่สมรสที่ติดเชื้อเอชไอวี/เอดส์ Unsafe Sexual Behavior at Risk of HIV Transmission and Denial Experiences of Unsafe Sexual Intercourse with Their Sex Partner among People Living with HIV/AIDS
Abstract
A mixed study of sexual behavior at risk for HIV transmission and denial experiences of unsafe sexual intercourse was the first phase of the action research was intended to develop the sexual behavior at risk protection of spreading HIV to spouse or partner and to study the denial experiences of unsafe sex. A total of 81, 50 were women (61%), 31 were men (38.3%). The finding found that more than one-third of the women living with HIV/AIDS had sex with both infected and non-infected partners without wearing condoms. Ten percent of women had been physical, sexual and verbal abuse, including harassment or harassment words by their spouse/sex partner to force women to have unsafe sexual intercourse. Thirty four percent of women think that women did not have the right to reject or deny unsafe sex with partners, and 62 % think that the refusal to have sex with a partner would do more harm than good. In the male samples, 45% had sex with a wife or partner even no condom were used. Three percent of males used to harass, threaten, or say uncomfortable words to force women to have unsafe sex with them. The methods which the samples used to the refusal unsafe sex including refused by verbal, given the medical reasoning, health reasons, telling lies, helping husbands to reach the climax by hands instead of intercourse. The results of the refusal, 68% of the women respondents had successful refusal.