Socio-cultural factors
Women are essentially at more risk in cultures and communities
that remove their control over their own bodies. Women are often blamed
incorrectly as the source of HIV infection and carry the dual burden of
infection and of caring for infected family members. Gender inequalities,
poverty, less access to education and lack of employment opportunities force
many women into commercial sex work in order to survive, and this group of women
are at very high risk of HIV infection50,51. Conversely, many more
women are monogamous, but are at high risk due to the sexual behaviour of their
male partner. Traditional practices and customs such as "dry sex" practices,
vaginal douching with non antiseptic compounds, female circumcision and "widow
cleansing" may all have an effect on increasing women's risk of HIV
infection51,52,53,54,55,56,57. Despite their high risk of infection,
cultural practices and pressures often prevent women from taking the necessary
precautions to guard against infection. Use of male condoms is low in many
developing countries. The desire and the societal pressure to reproduce make it
difficult for women to practice protected sex. Young women are at highest risk
of infections in developing countries, many of them at the beginning of their
reproductive lives. Even after a diagnosis of HIV infection, most women will not
change their reproductive choices58,59. There are no methods
available for women to use to prevent HIV transmission, independent of the male
partner, with the possible exception of the female condom60,61.
Female barrier methods remain expensive or unavailable in most developing
countries, where male resistance to condom use is common, although the recent
introduction of social marketing of the female condom in some southern African
countries has demonstrated that there is considerable
demand.