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Published online before print April 23, 2008, 10.1097/PSY.0b013e31816fdf0e
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Psychosomatic Medicine 70:496-504 (2008)
© 2008 American Psychosomatic Society


REVIEW ARTICLES

The Culture of Condoms: Culturally Grounded Variables and Their Association With Attitudes to Condoms

Christine Liddell, BA (Hons), DPhil, Melanie Giles, BSc (Hons), DPhil and Gordon Rae, BSc (Hons), PhD

School of Psychology, University of Ulster, Northern Ireland.

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Christine Liddell, BA (Hons), DPhil, School of Psychology, University of Ulster, Cromore Road, Coleraine, Northern Ireland BT52 1SA. E-mail: c.liddell{at}ulster.ac.uk

Objective: To examine attitudes toward condoms and their association with culturally grounded beliefs among young South African adults.

Methods: A questionnaire survey undertaken in three different locations (urban, rural, and mixed), including 1100 participants, and implementing both a cross-validational and a bootstrap multivariate design. Outcome measures were intention to use a condom at next sex and condom salience (i.e., confidence in the protective value of condoms). Culturally grounded predictors included traditional beliefs about illness, beliefs in ancestral protection, endorsement of AIDS myths, and mortality salience (CONTACT).

Results: Participants exhibited strong endorsement of indigenous beliefs about illness and ancestral protection, and moderate endorsement of AIDS myths. Participants who viewed condoms as important for HIV prevention were more likely to show strong endorsement of both beliefs in ancestral protection and traditional beliefs about illness. Participants who strongly endorsed AIDS myths viewed condoms as less important and also had lower intention to use scores. Finally, participants who knew HIV positive people, and/or people who had died of HIV-related illnesses, had higher condom salience and higher intention to use scores.

Conclusions: Results challenge the assumption that culturally grounded variables are inherently adversarial in their relationship to biomedical models of HIV prevention, and offer insights into how traditional beliefs and cultural constructions of HIV/AIDS might be used more effectively in HIV education programs.

Key Words: HIV/AIDS • indigenous beliefs • AIDS • myths • culture • Africa • condoms

Abbreviations: TBAI = traditional beliefs about illness; AP = belief in ancestral protection from adversity; CS = condom salience; IUCNS = intention to use a condom at next sex; CONTACT = knowing people who have died of HIV/AIDS or who are HIV-positive.







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