2017
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186457
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Transgender female sex workers’ HIV knowledge, experienced stigma, and condom use in the Dominican Republic

Abstract: IntroductionNot only do transgender female sex workers have some of the highest rates of sexually transmitted infections (STI), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and experienced stigma, they also have higher likelihood of early sexual debut and some of the lowest levels of educational attainment compared to other stigmatized populations. Some of the most common interventions designed to reduce transmission of HIV and STIs seek to educate high-risk groups on sexual health and encourage condom use across all p… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…Items for these subscales were summed, such that greater summary scores indicated greater frequency of using a particular type of coping style. We classified scales as adaptive and maladaptive, based on previous studies (28, 46, 58) and higher-order exploratory factor analyses with promax rotation, as recommended by Carver (57). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Items for these subscales were summed, such that greater summary scores indicated greater frequency of using a particular type of coping style. We classified scales as adaptive and maladaptive, based on previous studies (28, 46, 58) and higher-order exploratory factor analyses with promax rotation, as recommended by Carver (57). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Transgender and male SWs may also face intersectional compounded vulnerabilities based on transphobia and homophobia. 120…”
Section: Sex Workersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is no paucity of research articles on transgender women who work in the sex industry, and researchers have conducted studies around the globe and in countries such as China (Cai et al, ; Wang et al, ), Colombia (Bianchi et al, ), the Dominican Republic (Budhwani et al, ), India (Chakrapani, Newman, & Noronha, ), Jamaica (Logie et al, ), Malaysia (Nemoto, de Guzman, The, Iwamoto, & Trocki, ), Mexico (Infante, Sosa‐Rubi, & Cuadra, ), Pakistan (Collumbien et al, ; Usman, Khan, Bashir, Amjad, & Amjad, ); Peru (Degtyar et al, ), Portugal (Oliveira, ), South Africa (Samudzi & Mannell, ), Thailand, (Nemoto, de Guzman, et al, ), Turkey (Engin, ) and the United States (Nemoto, Operario, Keatley, Han, & Soma, , 2011; Sausa, Keatley, & Operario, , Wilson et al, , Hoffman, ). In much of this research, researchers focused on condomless sex between trans women who exchange sex for money with cisgender men, and how this high‐risk behavior contributed to high rates of HIV among transgender women in regions as diverse as China, Jamaica, Peru, and the Dominican Republic (e.g., Budhwani et al, ; Cai et al, ; Degtyar et al, ; Logie et al, ; Wang et al, ). Chakrapani et al, (2018) used a social exclusion framework that, without using the language of cissexism, examined the role of gender discrimination and marginalization as a motivation for trans women to trade sex.…”
Section: The Absence Of Transmasculine and Non‐binary People In Sex Wmentioning
confidence: 99%