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The Effect of Migration on HIV High-risk Behaviors among Mexican Migrants

The Effect of Migration on HIV High-risk Behaviors among Mexican Migrants. Melissa A. Sanchez 1 , María T. Hernández 1 , Alicia Vera 1 , Carlos Magis-Rodríguez 2 , Juan D. Ruiz 3 , Michael V. Drake 4 , George F. Lemp 1 1 California HIV/AIDS Research Program, University of California,

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The Effect of Migration on HIV High-risk Behaviors among Mexican Migrants

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  1. The Effect of Migration on HIV High-risk Behaviors among Mexican Migrants Melissa A. Sanchez1, María T. Hernández1, Alicia Vera1, Carlos Magis-Rodríguez2, Juan D. Ruiz3, Michael V. Drake4, George F. Lemp1 1California HIV/AIDS Research Program, University of California, Office of the President 2CENSIDA, Secretaria de Salud de Mexico 3Office of AIDS, California Department of Public Health 4University of California, Irvine IAC 2008 Mexico City Tuesday, August 5, 2008

  2. Mexican Immigrants in California • California is home to about 40% of Mexican Immigrants in the U.S. • Over 11 million Mexican immigrants live in the U.S. • Over 4 million Mexican immigrants live in California. Source: : U.S. Census Bureau, 2006 American Community Survey • Economic and social factors are the driving force for migration to California.

  3. Migration-related factors such as poverty, underemployment, substandard housing, isolation, constant mobility, depression, and limited access to healthcare contribute to the vulnerability among Mexican migrants of acquiring HIV while in the U.S.

  4. Mexico is Surrounded by Higher HIV Prevalences Prevalencia por cada 100 personas de 15-49 años 0.6% 0.3% Belice, 2.0% Honduras, 1.6% Guatemala, 1.0% El Salvador, 0.6% Fuente: ONUSIDA. Informe sobre la epidemia mundial de VIH/SIDA 2002.

  5. Background • Hypothesis: The impact of migration from Mexico to the U.S. leads to increased risk for HIV infection. • Previous studies have identified an association between Mexican migration to the U.S. and increased HIV high-risk behaviors; however, the individual level change in these behaviors after migration has not been quantified. • Utilizing a crossover study design, we directly quantified the change in HIV high-risk behaviors among Mexican migrants by comparing their individual behaviors before and after migration.

  6. CMESP • The California-Mexico Epidemiological Surveillance Pilot (CMESP): • Binational collaboration between federal, state, and local agencies in Mexico and in California. • Combines outreach techniques with sample survey methods to enumerate, sample, and estimate HIV high-risk behavior prevalence

  7. Target Population: Migrants and Recent Immigrants Inclusion criteria: • Persons born in Mexico that have been living/working in the U.S. for five years or less • Persons born in Mexico that have been living/working in the U.S. for more than five years but return to Mexico at least every 24 months • Persons between the ages of 18-64

  8. CMESP Sampling Methodology • CMESP is a venue-based targeted sample of Mexican migrants living in rural and urban areas in the counties of San Diego and Fresno. Sampling included: • Identifying low-, moderate-, and high-risk sites for enumeration and sampling based on key informant interviews and focus groups with the target population • Participants were systematically sampled and recruited at each site in relative proportion to the volume of eligible migrants enumerated at that site. • 35-minute standardized questionnaire (refusal rate ~25%) • Sampling was conducted July-November 2005. • The sampling frame was dynamic, consisting of 36 sites. • 458 Mexican migrants were sampled.

  9. CMESP Recruitment Venues • Male Work Venues: agricultural work fields, male migrant camps, makeshift huts in the hills, and job pick-up locations. • Bar and Club Venues: including MSM identified sites. • Community Venues: where male and female migrants worked and lived or congregated regularly (e.g., family migrant camps, laundromats, parks, adult schools, churches, grocery stores).

  10. Study Design and Analysis • Crossover study design • Collection of a comprehensive range of data on high-risk sexual and drug use behaviors prior to and after migration created matched-pair data for each study participant. • The strength of this crossover study design is that each person serves as his/her own control. • Using exact conditional logistic regression, we estimated odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals, controlling for venue type and gender.

  11. Change in Behaviors after Migration for Men (n=364) * Mid-p value

  12. Change in Behaviors after Migration for Men (n=364) * Mid-p value

  13. Sexual Partner who was a Sex WorkerStratified by Venue Type: Men (n=364) * Mid-p value

  14. Sexual Partner who was MaleStratified by Venue Type: Men (n=364) *Mid-p value **Degenerate conditional distribution

  15. Effect Modifiers • Male migrants who have been living or working in the U.S. for over five years. • The youngest age cohort of male migrants (18-29 years old)

  16. Conclusion Though results indicate a significant decrease in the number of male migrants reporting low condom use, more notably, results indicate a significant increase in the number of male migrants adopting HIV high-risk behaviors after migration related to sex with a sex worker, sex while under the influence of drugs or alcohol, sex work, and having sex with a male partner.

  17. Conclusion • Those male migrants identified as being at particularly elevated risk include: • Those living or working in the U.S. for over 5 years • The youngest age cohort (18-29 years old) • Those frequenting male work sites and bars and clubs where women are infrequently present • These stratified results suggest targeting HIV prevention interventions and HIV-related medical care needs to these male subgroups and male-dominated venues where this hard-to-reach population is concentrated. Migration’s significant effect on increased HIV high-risk behaviors among male Mexican migrants, specifically, suggests that, without intervention, the HIV epidemic may expand among this population.

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