Measures of Sexual Partnerships: Lengths, Gaps, Overlaps, and Sexually Transmitted Infection
- 1 April 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Sexually Transmitted Diseases
- Vol. 33 (4), 209-214
- https://doi.org/10.1097/01.olq.0000191318.95873.8a
Abstract
The length of time between partnerships ("gap") is an important determinant of the overall transmission system of sexually transmitted infections. We describe the distributions of gaps, lengths, and overlaps among participants in a random-digit dialing survey conducted among 1194 Seattle residents during 2003-2004. Survey participants were restricted to those 18 to 39 years of age with fluency in the English language. We limited our analysis to the 1051 (88%) participants who reported ever engaging in vaginal, oral, or anal intercourse and reported information on gaps, lengths, and overlaps. Most (59%) observed gaps between partnerships were of length<or=6 months; therefore, the majority of 18- to 39-year-olds seeking new partners find a new partner well within the infectious period of chlamydia infection, gonorrhea, and syphilis (if no treatment is received) and herpes simplex virus, human papilloma virus, and human immunodeficiency virus infections. This was generally true independent of gender, race, income, or education. Gap length, however, correlated with age. The observed shorter gap lengths among younger individuals reinforce the need to focus interventions on adolescents and young adults, particularly those with the potential to mix with infected individuals.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Brief but Efficient: Acute HIV Infection and the Sexual Transmission of HIVThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2004
- Sexual contacts and epidemic thresholdsNature, 2003
- Gap Length: An Important Factor in Sexually Transmitted Disease TransmissionSexually Transmitted Diseases, 2003
- The Vanishing Respondent In Telephone SurveysJournal of Advertising Research, 2002
- “It Takes a Village”Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 2002
- Comparison of key parameters of sexual behaviour in four African urban populations with different levels of HIV infectionAIDS, 2001
- The web of human sexual contactsNature, 2001
- The effect of pair formation and variable infectivity on the spread of an infection without recoveryMathematical Biosciences, 1998
- Concurrent partnerships and the spread of HIVAIDS, 1997
- A General Model of Sexually Transmitted Disease Epidemiology and Its Implications for ControlMedical Clinics of North America, 1990