Mujer Mas Segura
Funded by NIDA grant R01 DA023877; PI: Steffanie Strathdee
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Photo by Dr. María Luisa Zúñiga
Beauty parlor day with Mujer Mas Segura participants Photo by Alicia Vera
Beauty parlor day with Mujer Mas Segura participants Photo by Alicia Vera |
Globally, FSWs who inject drugs (FSW-IDUs) are important ‘bridge’ populations that can transmit HIV/STIs to the general population; however, interventions to reduce both their injection and sexual risks are lacking. The overall goal of this epidemiologic study is to simultaneously reduce high risk sexual and injection behaviors among FSW-IDUs in two Mexico-U.S. border cities, among whom HIV prevalence has recently increased from 2% to 14%; 46% had at least one active STI. Our specific aims are:
To meet these aims, we will recruit 600 HIV-negative FSW-IDUs (300 each in Tijuana and Cd. Juarez) and randomize women to one of four time-equivalent groups in a 2x2 factorial design (Group A: Attention control; Group B: injection risk intervention and didactic safer sex education; Group C: sexual risk intervention and didactic safer injection education; Group D: Both active injection and sexual interventions). All women receive free STI treatment and will be followed-up at 4, 8 and 12 months. Our factorial design allows us to ‘unpack’ the intervention to determine whether its components are just as effective in reducing injection and/or sexual risks, or if the more intensive conditions are needed to alter the epidemiology of HIV/STIs, thus having direct, tangible policy implications for Mexico and the US. Interventions that reduce HIV risks among FSW-IDUs may curtail the burgeoning HIV epidemic in the U.S-Mexico border region, and have applicability to other resource-poor countries. Click here to view a video component of this intervention, made by some of our project participants. |


