학술논문

Loneliness, Risky Beliefs and Intentions about Practicing Safer Sex among Methamphetamine Dependent Individuals
Document Type
article
Source
Substance Use & Misuse. 57(2)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Psychology
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Methamphetamine
Substance Misuse
HIV/AIDS
Behavioral and Social Science
Prevention
Clinical Research
Brain Disorders
Aetiology
2.3 Psychological
social and economic factors
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Amphetamine-Related Disorders
HIV Infections
Humans
Intention
Loneliness
Safe Sex
methamphetamine dependence
risky sexual behavior
norms
HIV
TMARC Group
Public Health and Health Services
Substance Abuse
Public health
Applied and developmental psychology
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundMethamphetamine use is a known predictor of riskier sexual behaviors, which can have important public health implications (e.g., HIV-transmission risk). Loneliness also is associated with riskier sexual behaviors, though the relationship between loneliness and beliefs and/or intentions to practice safer sex has not been examined among people dependent on methamphetamine.Materials and methodsIndividuals who met DSM-IV criteria for lifetime methamphetamine dependence and current (≤ 18-months) methamphetamine abuse or dependence (METH+ n = 56) were compared to those without severity and recency of methamphetamine use (METH- n = 59). These groups did not differ on social network size or proportion of people with HIV (∼58% HIV+). Participants completed the NIH Toolbox Loneliness Scale and the Sexual Risks Scale's "Norms" and "Intentions" subscales.ResultsMETH+ individuals were significantly lonelier than METH- controls (t(113) = 2.45, p = .02). Methamphetamine dependence remained significantly associated with greater loneliness, after controlling for HIV status and other relevant covariates (e.g., neurocognitive impairment, history of mood disorder, social network size; F = 3.70, Adjusted R2 = 0.18, p = .0009). Loneliness, above and beyond the aforementioned covariates, was significantly associated with riskier beliefs and intentions to practice safer sex among METH+, but not METH-, individuals (β = 2.92, p = .02).ConclusionsLoneliness is prevalent among individuals dependent on methamphetamine, and is uniquely associated with riskier beliefs and intentions regarding practicing safer sex. Findings may aid in identifying individuals at-risk of engaging in riskier sexual behaviors and guide risk prevention strategies.