History of Violence as a Predictor of HIV Risk among Multi-Ethnic, Urban Youth in the Southwest.

Flavio Francisco Marsiglia, Tanya Nieri, Elizabeth Valdez, Maria Gurrola, Catherine Marrs
Author Information
  1. Flavio Francisco Marsiglia: Distinguished Foundation Professor of Cultural Diversity & Health, School of Social Work and Director of the Southwest Interdisciplinary Research Center, Arizona State University.

Abstract

This community-based exploratory study examined the effects of a history of violence, ethnic identification, and acculturation status on HIV risk among a majority Latino sample of youth living in a large metropolitan area of the Southwest in the United States. The participants reported high rates of violence and attitudes that put them at risk for HIV/AIDS infection. They participated in 1 of 2 prevention interventions offered by a local non-governmental organization. The first intervention was tailored for adjudicated youth (N=49) who were either institutionalized or were returning to the community after involvement with the criminal justice system. The second intervention targeted youth (N=32) who were homeless/runaway and/or self-identified as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender (GLBT). T-tests and linear regression were used to determine the differences between youth reporting a history of violence by type of perpetrator, its relationship with HIV risk, and the role of ethnic identification and acculturation status as potential protective factors. Violence by a family member was the most common type of violence reported, with a history of violence positively related to HIV risk. Ethnic identification and linguistic acculturation had a protective effect against HIV risk among the homeless and GLBT youth but not among the adjudicated youth.

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Grants

  1. P20 MD002316/NIMHD NIH HHS
  2. R24 DA013937/NIDA NIH HHS
  3. R24 DA013937-01A1/NIDA NIH HHS

Word Cloud

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