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Depression and HIV risk among female sex workers in Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, South Africa: Results from a respondent-driven sampling study

Sex workers have a higher risk of acquiring and transmitting HIV as a result of social, structural, biomedical and behavioural factors. Many recent studies have highlighted that sex workers and other key populations experience higher levels of depression compared to the general population. Evidence...

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Main Author: Rossouw, Johannes
Other Authors: Myer, Landon
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Health and Family Medicine 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Rossouw, Johannes
author2 Myer, Landon
author_browse Myer, Landon
Rossouw, Johannes
author_facet Myer, Landon
Rossouw, Johannes
author_sort Rossouw, Johannes
collection Thesis
description Sex workers have a higher risk of acquiring and transmitting HIV as a result of social, structural, biomedical and behavioural factors. Many recent studies have highlighted that sex workers and other key populations experience higher levels of depression compared to the general population. Evidence is also emerging that mental health issues such as depression are related to HIV risk behaviour as well as the social and structural factors that leave sex workers vulnerable to bio-behavioural risks. The study protocol is described in Part A of this mini-dissertation. The study from which these data were derived is discussed in detail. Particular attention is placed on the use of respondent-driven sampling as a probabilistic method to estimate population proportion for hidden populations. The primary outcome, depression, and how it is measured through the Patient Health Questionnaire 9, is discussed in detail. The objective of measuring the prevalence of depression and assessing how it relates to risk factors is noted. The protocol argues that most research on sex workers focuses only on social, structural and bio-behavioural risk factors and rarely includes intrapersonal factors such as mental health. Based on this gap, it is argued that this research will help elucidate how depression, as an intrapersonal factor, relates to HIV risk. The literature review in Part B expands the argument that mental health in general and depression in particular are not given the attention they deserve as there are very few studies that measure mental health variables and even fewer that attempt to make any link between mental health, bio-behavioural risk and social vulnerabilities. The journal article in Part C offers empirical evidence that depression is higher among female sex workers than the general population and that depression is strongly associated with bio-behavioural and social risk factors. The article argues for more integration of mental health in research and programme implementation among sex workers.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31733 Depression and HIV risk among female sex workers in Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, South Africa: Results from a respondent-driven sampling study Rossouw, Johannes Myer, Landon Epidemiology and Biostatistics Sex workers have a higher risk of acquiring and transmitting HIV as a result of social, structural, biomedical and behavioural factors. Many recent studies have highlighted that sex workers and other key populations experience higher levels of depression compared to the general population. Evidence is also emerging that mental health issues such as depression are related to HIV risk behaviour as well as the social and structural factors that leave sex workers vulnerable to bio-behavioural risks. The study protocol is described in Part A of this mini-dissertation. The study from which these data were derived is discussed in detail. Particular attention is placed on the use of respondent-driven sampling as a probabilistic method to estimate population proportion for hidden populations. The primary outcome, depression, and how it is measured through the Patient Health Questionnaire 9, is discussed in detail. The objective of measuring the prevalence of depression and assessing how it relates to risk factors is noted. The protocol argues that most research on sex workers focuses only on social, structural and bio-behavioural risk factors and rarely includes intrapersonal factors such as mental health. Based on this gap, it is argued that this research will help elucidate how depression, as an intrapersonal factor, relates to HIV risk. The literature review in Part B expands the argument that mental health in general and depression in particular are not given the attention they deserve as there are very few studies that measure mental health variables and even fewer that attempt to make any link between mental health, bio-behavioural risk and social vulnerabilities. The journal article in Part C offers empirical evidence that depression is higher among female sex workers than the general population and that depression is strongly associated with bio-behavioural and social risk factors. The article argues for more integration of mental health in research and programme implementation among sex workers. 2020-04-30T13:49:59Z 2020-04-30T13:49:59Z 2019 2020-04-30T10:09:09Z Master Thesis Masters MPH https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31733 eng application/pdf Department of Public Health and Family Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Epidemiology and Biostatistics
Rossouw, Johannes
Depression and HIV risk among female sex workers in Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, South Africa: Results from a respondent-driven sampling study
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Depression and HIV risk among female sex workers in Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, South Africa: Results from a respondent-driven sampling study
title_full Depression and HIV risk among female sex workers in Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, South Africa: Results from a respondent-driven sampling study
title_fullStr Depression and HIV risk among female sex workers in Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, South Africa: Results from a respondent-driven sampling study
title_full_unstemmed Depression and HIV risk among female sex workers in Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, South Africa: Results from a respondent-driven sampling study
title_short Depression and HIV risk among female sex workers in Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality, South Africa: Results from a respondent-driven sampling study
title_sort depression and hiv risk among female sex workers in nelson mandela bay municipality south africa results from a respondent driven sampling study
topic Epidemiology and Biostatistics
url https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31733
work_keys_str_mv AT rossouwjohannes depressionandhivriskamongfemalesexworkersinnelsonmandelabaymunicipalitysouthafricaresultsfromarespondentdrivensamplingstudy