3. Risk networks: the need for research in sexual networks
Mathematical models show that different patterns of sexual
mixing have widely different implications for the spread of the HIV epidemic [5,
6, 7]. If people mix within relatively closed groups - homosexuals only with
homosexuals, married people only with their partners or other married people,
prostitutes only with a well defined group of individual clients - HIV may
spread quickly within some of the groups but will have a limited impact on the
population as a whole. But if there is much more mixing between groups, with
injecting drug users having sex with prostitutes, whose clients have sex with
their own wives, for instance, the disease may take off slowly but will
insinuate itself into many more corners of society. Bridge populations,
which form a link between otherwise unconnected groups, may be of particular
importance for the dynamic of the epidemic by linking low and high risk
behaviour populations.
Population surveys such as those recommended by WHO/GPA and
UNAIDS have brought better knowledge of high risk groups and high risk
behaviours. However, people are put at risk not just by their own behaviour but
by that of others to whom they are linked in sexual networks. Policy makers
should, from the shape of these networks, be able to identify useful points for
intervention. It is up to social scientists to identify how sexual networks are
spread across the society, by whom and why.
Thus, with the move from evaluation as the primary objective to
that of more in-depth understanding of sexual networks, there is also a shift to
an analytical framework that makes partnerships rather than
individuals the primary unit of analysis [7]. Individual-based approaches
explain behaviours by noting the characteristics of the individual: attitudes,
knowledge, beliefs and education; while partnership-based approaches will try to
explain behaviours by noting the characteristics of the relationship: its
duration, mutual expectations or gender roles, for
example.