Trading HIV for sheep: Risky sexual behavior and the response of female sex workers to Tabaski in Senegal

Author:

Cust Henry1ORCID,Lépine Aurélia2,Treibich Carole3,Powell‐Jackson Timothy1,Radice Rosalba4,Tidiane Ndour Cheikh5

Affiliation:

1. Global Health Economics Centre London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK

2. University College London Institute for Global Health London UK

3. University Grenoble Alpes CNRS, INRAE Grenoble INP GAEL Grenoble France

4. Bayes Business School, City University of London London UK

5. Division de Lutte contre le Sida et les IST Institut d'hygiène Sociale Dakar Senegal

Abstract

AbstractWe use a cohort of female sex workers (FSWs) in Senegal to show how large anticipated economic shocks lead to increased risky sexual behavior. Exploiting the exogenous timing of interviews, we study the effect of Tabaski, the most important Islamic festival celebrated in Senegal, in which most households purchase an expensive animal for sacrifice. Condom use, measured robustly via the list experiment, falls by between 27.3 percentage points (pp) (65.5%) and 43.1 pp (22.7%) in the 9 days before Tabaski, or a maximum of 49.5 pp (76%) in the 7 day period preceding Tabaski. The evidence suggests the economic pressures from Tabaski are key to driving the behavior change observed through the price premium for condomless sex. Those most exposed to the economic pressure from Tabaski were unlikely to be using condoms at all in the week before the festival. Our findings show that Tabaski leads to increased risky behaviors for FSWs, a key population at high risk of HIV infection, for at least 1 week every year and has implications for FSWs in all countries celebrating Tabaski or similar festivals. Because of the scale, frequency, and size of the behavioral response to shocks of this type, policy should be carefully designed to protect vulnerable women against anticipated shocks.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health Policy

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