Dimensions of Sexual Health Conversations among U.S. Black Heterosexual Couples
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Sample Characteristics
3.1.1. Couples’ Sexual Behavior
3.1.2. Relationship Dynamics
3.2. Qualitative Findings Themes, Sub-Themes and Dimensions
3.2.1. Dyadic Observations of Couple’s Communication Patterns
3.2.2. Theme 1: Dimensions of Sexual Health Conversations
M: …we asked each other if we’ve had partners before. How many partners? did we use protection? did we get tested? and we shared that. We didn’t have a problem with that…
F: …we just recently had a recent conversation…We thoroughly discussed our sexual history with each other. Like things that we–
M: Oh yeah, yeah. Yeah.
F: …things that we might have not told each other before…
M: Yeah, we talked about it and who those partners were
F: …Because there were people that I thought you did not have sex with, and you actually told me that you did.
M: One person!
F: I’m not mad at you…I’m just saying we had the conversation…
HIV-concordant-negative couple (>5 yrs.)
F: …It was me saying, listen, this is what we’re not going to do…it was an actual situation that we went through…if he did give me permission to go sleep around…I’m not going to go do it because it’s just not my thing…
HIV-concordant-negative couple, (<5 yrs.)
M: …we met at our primary care place…we were open beings, with like the questions, …‘do you know your status?’ You know different-or asking like ‘are you looking for a monogamous relationship?’ You know or ‘do you want an open-relationship?’…sometimes you have to ask those questions to know if you even want to go there because I like being with one person…
HIV-concordant-negative couple, (>5 yrs.)
F: We just recently had one [conversation]…A couple weeks ago.
M: We’ve been [together] for over twenty-two years…We talk about private ways to spice up our sex life…and what we’re capable of doing and what we aren’t capable of doing based on our age and our physical health.
F: The body changes. All types of things…It just happens.
HIV-concordant-negative couple, (>20 yrs.)
M: …all my friends caught some type of STD…even like finding out that you could catch certain things just by oral sex…I just don’t never want to catch anything, even if I can get rid of it…And I never have…
F: That’s good. Just because you ask somebody something don’t mean you going to get the truth.
M: That’s true. But I still ask them…there’s no excuse…even if you feel like you’re not exactly confident with the person telling you, just either don’t move forward or you use condoms and you live with your decision…
HIV-concordant-negative couple, (>5 yrs.)
F: …we will have discussions because he is [HIV] positive…we constantly go to the doctor every three months…we find out what his viral levels are, and I’m still negative, and he still looks to me, ‘do you still want to be in this relationship?…
M: …that’s just the insecurity in me. That’s all.
F: …So five years later it’s still discussed. We still have those questions.
M: …Because you got to make sure…anybody that has this develops some type of complex…she’ll say, that girl’s all up in your face right and I be like okay, so what…why would I risk that?
F: …you may not look it and she might be open minded and…have everything you need that I don’t have. That’s the discussion that we still have with each other. Like, I’m not going to leave you, you might just find a broad that’s better than me. I have to worry about that…is my love still there, am I still your number one. You know we’re both saying to each other, am I still your number one.
Serodiscordant couple, Male HIV+, (5 yrs.)
3.2.3. Theme 2: Leveraging Sexual Health Conversations toward Health Promotion Behaviors
F: …it was the effects of PrEP, I didn’t like them—the bone loss. And I’ve already had a number of accidents with bone loss…I am in a relationship with someone who has HIV, but I said there’s gotta be something else…to use as a safe-ty measure, back-up…I mean look what it’s doing to my bones..
M: Especially now, I’ve been on my HIV meds for quite a while. And I’m undetectable. And to my knowledge…I can’t infect anybody. Yeah.
F: …initially we discussed going on it…Just the same way coming off it.
Serodiscordant couple, Male HIV+, (>5 yrs.)
F: …I’ve experienced sexual abuse…
M: …that’s a hard conversation to have…the previous experiences that weren’t by choice…
F: …that’s’ something that my partner would have to be aware with-he can’t do certain things…
M: …ask permission before doing things that someone who hasn’t been abused would consider normal…do you mind me sharing…?
F: Yeah ((Laughing))
M: So like for instance, if I were to caress her breast, it causes her to tense…
F: Yeah, be on defense.
M: So now I ask permission, like is it okay if I touch your breast?…like figure out a way to ask permission or like what are your triggers and then be sensitive to those.
HIV-concordant-negative couple, (<5 yrs.)
M: I try to keep her health up like with black sea oil…I try to keep my fitness as well.
F: …he loves to eat healthy…because of the situation that he’s in.
M: [And I like to cook]…that’s one of the things like we developed in this relationship…I try to keep her from smoking cigarettes…But I can’t say too much because I smoke pot…we discuss a lot of stuff…
F: …like trying to have life insurance for our family…
Serodiscordant couple, Male HIV+, (5 yrs.)
4. Discussion
4.1. Conversation Dimensions
4.2. Leveraging Conversations toward Sexual Health Promotion
4.3. Implications for Health Promotion
4.4. Considerations for Future Research
4.5. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sample Size | Individual n = 56 (%) | Couple-Level n = 28 | |
---|---|---|---|
Partners Concur or Have Same Characteristic a | Partners Do Not Concur or Differ on Characteristic a | ||
Demographic Characteristic | n (%) | N (%) | N (%) |
New York State Metro area | 28 (100) | 0 (0) | |
Buffalo | 20 (36) | ||
New York City | 14 (25) | ||
Rochester | 22 (39) | ||
Racial ethnic background | 18 (64) | 10 (36) | |
Black American | 40 (71) | ||
Black Hispanic/Afro-Latin | 8 (14) | ||
Other Black identity | 8 (15) | ||
Reported sex assignment | - | - | |
Male | 28 (50) | ||
Female | 28 (50) | ||
Current gender identity | - | - | |
Man | 28 (50) | ||
Woman | 28 (50) | ||
Current sexual identity | 24 (86) | 4 (14) | |
Heterosexual | 50 (89) | ||
Other identity/Don’t do labels (no label) | 6 (11) | ||
Education attainment | 14 (50) | 14 (50) | |
Some high school (did not complete) | 11 (20) | ||
High school diploma or G.E.D. | 21 (38) | ||
Training program or Associate’s degree | 13 (23) | ||
College graduate or higher degree | 11 (19) | ||
Employment status | 19 (68) | 9 (32) | |
Full-time | 19 (34) | ||
Part-time | 9 (16) | ||
Unemployed | 8 (14) | ||
Disabled/Student/Part-time | 20 (25) | ||
Relationship type | 21 (75) | 7 (25) | |
Married, monogamous | 18 (32) | ||
Engaged, living together | 7 (13) | ||
Girlfriend/Boyfriend | 27 (55) | ||
Other | 4 (7) | ||
Relationship length | 21 (75) | 7 (25) | |
Less than 5 years | 19 (34) | ||
5 years or more | 37 (66) |
Individual Mean | Average Absolute Score Difference | |
---|---|---|
Sample size | N = 56 | N = 28 |
Relationship dynamic | M (SD) | M (SD) |
Preferences for sexual health outcomes [range: 1–5] a | ||
STI/HIV prevention | 4.30 (1.31) | 1.18 (1.45) |
Using condoms with main partner | 4.36 (1.26) | 0.86 (1.23) |
Having sex with someone other than your main partner | 3.41 (1.85) | 1.89 (1.75) |
Whether you will use condoms when having sex with someone other than your main partner | 3.50 (1.91) | 1.43 (1.84) |
Getting an STI or HIV test | 3.50 (1.79) | 1.36 (1.55) |
Communal coping on communication to reduce HIV threat scale [range: 1–5] b | ||
Using condoms when we have sex with each other | 2.95 (1.68) | 1.25 (1.42) |
Limiting the number of other sex partners | 3.48 (1.73) | 2.04 (1.54) |
Deciding about either of us having sex outside our relationship | 2.75 (1.79) | 2.36 (1.60) |
Using condoms when either of us has sex outside our relationship | 3.14 (1.80) | 1.71 (1.64) |
Getting tested regularly for STDs and/or HIV | 3.73 (1.51) | 1.25 (1.37) |
Being sexually faithful to each other | 4.25 (1.06) | 0.79 (0.95) |
Sexual relationship power scale | ||
Relationship control [range: 1–4] c | 1.76 (0.51) | 0.60 (0.47) |
Decision making dominance [range: 1–3] d | 1.94 (0.32) | -- |
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Leblanc, N.M.; St. Vil, N.M.; Bond, K.T.; Mitchell, J.W.; Juarez, A.C.; Lambert, F.; Muheriwa, S.R.; McMahon, J. Dimensions of Sexual Health Conversations among U.S. Black Heterosexual Couples. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 588. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010588
Leblanc NM, St. Vil NM, Bond KT, Mitchell JW, Juarez AC, Lambert F, Muheriwa SR, McMahon J. Dimensions of Sexual Health Conversations among U.S. Black Heterosexual Couples. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(1):588. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010588
Chicago/Turabian StyleLeblanc, Natalie M., Noelle M. St. Vil, Keosha T. Bond, Jason W. Mitchell, Adrian C. Juarez, Faith Lambert, Sadandaula R. Muheriwa, and James McMahon. 2023. "Dimensions of Sexual Health Conversations among U.S. Black Heterosexual Couples" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 1: 588. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010588
APA StyleLeblanc, N. M., St. Vil, N. M., Bond, K. T., Mitchell, J. W., Juarez, A. C., Lambert, F., Muheriwa, S. R., & McMahon, J. (2023). Dimensions of Sexual Health Conversations among U.S. Black Heterosexual Couples. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(1), 588. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010588