Abstract

The transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and other communicable diseases is socially organized. Public health attempts to reduce HIV transmission have admonished persons to reduce their risks--in effect, to act as if their partners are or could be HIV-seropositive. Therefore, a good test of the effectiveness of public health messages is to compare the riskiness of behaviors among HIV-seronegative persons with the riskiness of the behavior of serodiscordant partners. Data were collected for a network study of 267 drug users and nonusers in an urban inner city. Results show that in most of the domains studied, persons with HIV-seronegative partners engaged in less risky behavior than did persons whose partners were HIV-seropositive. This result suggests that risk reduction messages have been relatively successful in convincing most persons to treat their partner as if he or she were HIV-seropositive.

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