Unprotected Risky Sex Among Men with Opioid Dependence: Is More Needed to Be Done?

Author:

Chattopadhyay Ankita1ORCID,Chawla Nishtha1ORCID,Sen Mahadev Singh2ORCID,Verma Suraj1,Ganesh Ragul3ORCID,Sarkar Siddharth1ORCID,Ambekar Atul1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry and NDDTC, AIIMS, New Delhi, India

2. Department of Psychiatry, IHBAS, New Delhi, India

3. Department of Psychiatry, AIIMS, Jammu, India

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Risky behaviors are common among patients with substance use disorders. Knowing the determinants of risky sexual behaviors can identify individuals who may benefit from targeted interventions. The primary aim of the study was to assess unprotected risky sexual behavior and its sociodemographic and clinical correlates in treatment-seeking opioid-dependent patients. Methods: A cross-sectional exploratory study was done on 112 married treatment-seeking opioid-dependent male patients. A semi-structured proforma consisting of sociodemographic and clinical details was used to assess sexual behavior, other risky behaviors like injecting drug use (IDU), and knowledge of and attitude toward risky sexual behavior. Results: The mean age of the sample was 34.1 years, and that at first sexual intercourse was 18.6 years. History of unprotected risky sex (unprotected sex with a casual partner or female sex worker or person having a sexually transmitted disease or with males or having sex for rewards) was present in 30 patients (26.8% of the sample). Unprotected risky sex was found to be significantly associated with younger age at first sexual encounter ( p = .010), more sexual partners ( p < .001), greater frequency of masturbation ( p = .031), and watching pornography ( p = .028). However, it was not found to be related to other risky behaviors such as IDU ( p = .210) and sex under intoxication ( p = .149) and also did not vary between treatment-naïve and under-treatment populations ( p = .434). No significant relationship was found between knowledge and attitude about risky sexual behavior and unprotected risky sex in the present sample. Conclusion: Risky sexual behavior in opioid-dependent patients is a concern, as this may be an additional mode of transmission of blood-borne viruses apart from IDU. Safe sex practices need to be emphasized in this population, and efforts at behavioral changes are desirable.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference31 articles.

1. Defining “High-risk Sexual Behavior” in the Context of Substance Use

2. Common H. Substance use and risky sexual activity. Accessed January11, 2023. http://walt.mercersburg.net/me/resources/CASAIssueUpdate.pdf

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