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Proyecto de Salud Para Latinos: Understanding the Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of Young Latino Men and Women Re

Proyecto de Salud Para Latinos: Understanding the Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of Young Latino Men and Women Residing in Rural Oregon. Moderator: Marie Harvey OPHA Panel Presentation: October 18, 2010. Latino Health Project Why??.

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Proyecto de Salud Para Latinos: Understanding the Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of Young Latino Men and Women Re

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  1. Proyecto de Salud Para Latinos: Understanding the Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of Young Latino Men and Women Residing in Rural Oregon Moderator: Marie Harvey OPHA Panel Presentation: October 18, 2010

  2. Latino Health Project Why?? • Latinos disproportionately high rates of unintended pregnancy and STIs • Sexual health disparities only have the potential to grow • Non-traditional settlement areas experienced rapid and dramatic increases in the number of Latino residents with large numbers migrating to rural areas • Oregon has experienced a striking 52.7% growth in Latino population between the years 2000-2008 • Relatively little known about sexual risk profile of Latino men and women who live in rural Oregon.

  3. Latino Health Project Proyecto de Salud Para Latinos 5-year funded CDC study that examined the relational and contextual determinants of contraceptive use and sexual risk behavior among young adult Latinos in rural Oregon Project Period: 9/30/2007 – 9/29/2011

  4. Latino Health Project for Men Proyecto de Salud Para Hombres Latinos 3-year DHHS Office of Population Affairs funded study designed to improve delivery of sexual and reproductive health services to heterosexual Latino men in rural areas. Project Period: 9/30/2007 – 9/29/2011

  5. It Takes a Village… Research Team S. Marie Harvey, DrPH, MPH – Principal Investigator Ann P. Zukoski, DrPH, MPH - Co-Investigator Donna Champeau, PhD – Co-Investigator Jocelyn Warren, PhD, MPH – Post Doctoral Fellow Liana Winett – DrPH, MPH – Research Associate Meredith R. Branch, MPH - Project Coordinator Deanne Hudson, RN, MPH - Project Coordinator Marit Bovbjerg, MS – Research Assistant Antonio Torres, B.A. - Field Coordinator/Interviewer Leslie Salas Karnes - Graduate Research Assistant Doris Cancel-Tirado – Graduate Research Assistant Brennan Beauchesne - Undergraduate Student Intern

  6. It Takes a Village… Field Staff Recruiter/Interviewers/Translators Yazmin Brambila Victor Elias Javier Fernandez Salvador Jasmin Guerra Jazmin Gonzalez Alonso Oliveros Mario Rosales Patricia Robleto Elio Cacerras

  7. Community Partners • Tuality Salud • Virginia Garcia Clinics • Radio Movimiento • Planned Parenthood • Benton County Health Department • Centro Latino • Farmworker Housing Development Corporation • Linn-Benton Hispanic Advisory Committee • Woodburn Public Library • Chemeketa Community College

  8. Proyecto de Salud Para Hombres Latinos: Immigrant Latino Men Residing in Rural Communities in the Northwest: Exploring Physical and Social Environments Antonio Torres, Marie Harvey, Liana Winett, Deanne Hudson, & Meredith Branch OPHA Panel Presentation: October 18, 2010

  9. Goals Of the study: to increase understanding of sexual and reproductive health needs of heterosexual immigrant Latino men residing in rural areas of Oregon Today: to provide a snapshot of the lives of Latino men working and living in rural Oregon to describe how contextual factors might interact to increase men’s risk for HIV/STIs

  10. Latinos in Rural Communities Largest & fastest growing minority group in US, particularly in “new settlement areas” Face unique challenges that may influence sexual behavior and health service utilization that increase risk of exposure to HIV/STIs, unintended pregnancy Migration disrupts social, familial, sexual relationships The percent increase in Latino population over the last decades has been dramatic in Oregon, Washington and Idaho.

  11. % Increase Hispanic Population 1980-2000 [US Census 2000] 268% 81% 318% 178% 29%

  12. Disparities Facing the Latino Community High rates of unintended pregnancy, STIS & HIV/AIDS among U.S. Latinos 2007 AIDS case rate among Latinos was 3.3 times higher than for Whites In 2008, Latinos had highest syphilis rate and second highest chlamydia and gonorrhea rates among minority populations in OR

  13. Contextual Determinants Amaro and Raj (2000) called for including individually-based factors within the context of the larger social dynamics of gender, race/ethnicity and class oppression Our focus: how individual and interpersonal risk factors interact with sociostructural variables that place Latino men at increased risk

  14. Target population Heterosexual men who self-identify as Latino Immigrated to the U.S. in past 10 years 18-30 years old Live in rural Oregon Report intercourse within past 3 months Not seeking to get partner pregnant Not HIV +

  15. Challenges Trust Immigration Issues Legitimacy of Project Building a Presence Finding Participants Cultural Norms-Talking about Sexual Issues Perceived Discrimination Issues

  16. Recruitment and Networking Strategies Building community presence Outreach locations Marketing Face to face/Engaging participants

  17. Community Partners Tuality Salud Virginia Garcia Clinics Radio Movimiento Planned Parenthood Benton County Health Department Centro Latino Farmworker Housing Development Corporation Linn-Benton Hispanic Advisory Committee Woodburn Public Library Chemeketa Community College

  18. Study Methods Individual, semi-structured interviews 60-90 minutes long Bilingual, bicultural staff members conducted interviews in English or Spanish

  19. Analysis Interviewed 49 Latino men Audio-recorded, translated & transcribed NVIVO 8 qualitative data analysis software Ethnographic content analysis SPSS 17.0 to create frequency distributions of structured survey responses Content analysis using NVIVO8

  20. RESULTS…

  21. Participant Characteristics Average age 24 years 92% from Mexico Average 6 years living in the US; 4.3 years in OR 57% unemployed Mean household income $13,621 Mean 9.1 years of education completed

  22. Sexual Risk Profile Average age first intercourse 16 years Mean of 8.2 lifetime sexual partners 10% tested for STIs in past month 49% ever tested for HIV 45% ever had sex with prostitute 29% never used condoms during sex 46% report binge drinking

  23. Social and Physical Environment Living in Oregon Came to Oregon for increased opportunity Came to Oregon because of friends/family Cultural differences Working in Oregon Employment/unemployment Workplace conditions

  24. Social Relationships Family and sexual partners Social support Committed relationships

  25. Sexual Relationships Sex outside of committed relationship Loneliness Sexual experimentation Sexual needs Engaging with prostitutes Cultural differences

  26. Implications Risky environments + migration-driven factors = increased prevalence of HIV/STIs Social network dynamics, social isolation Address substance use Source, availability & social economy of prostitution

  27. Proyecto de Salud Para Latinos:Para HombresPerceived Structural Barriers to Sexual and Reproductive Health Services Deanne Hudson, Marie Harvey, Antonio Torres, Meredith Branch OPHA 2010 Annual Meeting October 18, 2010 Corvallis, Oregon

  28. Purpose of the Presentation • Characterize structural and service delivery factors that affect utilization of services • Explore the preferred context for services and strategies to promote access and utilization of services • Discuss implications of findings

  29. Greatest Concerns about Health and Sexual Health • Overall Health: • Sexual health was fourth • Sexual Health: • Over half had no concerns • About two fifths were concerned about STIs

  30. Utilization of Services • Almost half had ever used services - US • Community/Public Clinic: 52% • Emergency Department: 17% • HMO: 13% • Private Doctor: 9% • Utilization of SRH services - Oregon • Used STD Services: 31% • Received HIV Testing: 37% • A few used Family Planning services - US

  31. Health Insurance • 88% Lacked health insurance • Few had employer-provided coverage

  32. Structural Factors Affect Access & Use of SRH Services • Lack of knowledge • Cost • Time • Clinic Staff Characteristics - Language • Privacy – Confidentiality - Trust

  33. Factors Affect Access/Use of Family Planning Services • Few men ever used US family planning services • Self and Cohort: lack of knowledge • Cohort • Lack of interest and services not valued • Self • No need for FP services • Not ready for a family

  34. Factors Affect His Ability to Get Birth Control Now

  35. Experiences with Discrimination in Oregon • Over half reported ever having been discriminated against or made to feel unwelcome in Oregon.

  36. Perceived Discrimination in US Health Care Services About half who received health care in the US perceived: • Been treated with less courtesy than others • Been treated with less respect than others • Received poorer service than others • Scale adapted from Bird ST, Bogart LM, 2001.

  37. Preferred Context: How Men Want to Be Treated • About three fourths described the importance of having trust in your provider. • About two thirds wanted to be treated respectfully. • About half wanted equality and fair treatment.

  38. Preferred Delivery Setting for SRH Services • Prefer to receive services at Community/Public Health Clinics • Prefer to see a private doctor or clinic • Preferred Involvement in Decisions to Prevent Pregnancy • Talk with my partner and me together

  39. Strategies to Increase Use of SRH Services: What Can Clinics Do? • Increase Awareness and Knowledge • Reduce Cost • Efficient use of Time • Clinic Staff Characteristics - Language • Promote Privacy - Confidentiality - Trust

  40. Discussion • Results are consistent with the literature • Informs practice, policy and research

  41. Factors Influencing Effective Contraceptive Use Among a Sample of Latinos Residing in Rural Communities in the Northwest Jocelyn T. Warren, S. Marie Harvey & Marit Bovbjerg Oregon Public Health Association 2010 Annual Meeting Corvallis, Oregon

  42. Background • Unintended pregnancy high among Latinos • Use of contraception low • Inconsistent use • Reliance on less effective methods

  43. Previous Research • Individual factors identified • self-efficacy, perceived vulnerability, etc. • Cultural factors explored • machismo, familismo, marianismo • acculturation • Partner and relationship factors? • women’s pregnancy intention varies depending on partner • men often not included in contraceptive research • Include individual factors in larger context

  44. Study Purpose • Describe effective contraceptive use • Determine whether contextual factors are related to effective contraceptive use • Discuss significance of findings for reproductive and sexual health programs

  45. Latino Health ProjectProyectode Salud para Latinos • Multi-method study to increase understanding of social, cultural factors that influence condom use, sexual risk behavior, HIV/STI prevention among Latinos living in rural Oregon • Participants included young Latino heterosexual men and women and health care providers who serve Latinos in rural areas • Young adult participants recruited from clinics and community locations

  46. Methods • Eligibility criteria for study: • Ages18-25 • Current sexual partner • Not planning pregnancy • No sterilization within couple • Data derived from computer-assisted quantitative surveys with trained interviewers lasting ~1 hr

  47. Participants • Over 60% born outside the US • One quarter spoke only Spanish • Just over half completed high school • Almost half were married or living with partner • Median income was $15,000 and average household size was 3.5

  48. Effective Use of Contraception Three groups defined: • Female-controlled= use of LARC (IUDs, injections, rings, etc.) or regular use of pills • Male-controlled=male condom used at every sex in past three months • Others= non-use, use of ineffective methods, and inconsistent use of effective methods

  49. Sex (female/male) At least HS graduate Married and/or cohabitating Acculturation Scale Machismo Scale Birth control use self-efficacy scale Perceived vulnerability to pregnancy with partner Relationship commitment scale Contraceptive decision-making scale Perceived partner support for birth control Other Variables

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