Skip to main page content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

Https

The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

Access keys NCBI Homepage MyNCBI Homepage Main Content Main Navigation
. 2011 Oct 19:5:22.
doi: 10.1186/1752-1505-5-22.

Vulnerability to high risk sexual behaviour (HRSB) following exposure to war trauma as seen in post-conflict communities in eastern uganda: a qualitative study

Affiliations

Vulnerability to high risk sexual behaviour (HRSB) following exposure to war trauma as seen in post-conflict communities in eastern uganda: a qualitative study

Wilson Winstons Muhwezi et al. Confl Health. .

Abstract

Background: Much of the literature on the relationship between conflict-related trauma and high risk sexual behaviour (HRSB) often focuses on refugees and not mass in-country displaced people due to armed conflicts. There is paucity of research about contexts underlying HRSB and HIV/AIDS in conflict and post-conflict communities in Uganda. Understanding factors that underpin vulnerability to HRSB in post-conflict communities is vital in designing HIV/AIDS prevention interventions. We explored the socio-cultural factors, social interactions, socio-cultural practices, social norms and social network structures that underlie war trauma and vulnerability to HRSB in a post-conflict population.

Methods: We did a cross-sectional qualitative study of 3 sub-counties in Katakwi district and 1 in Amuria in Uganda between March and May 2009. We collected data using 8 FGDs, 32 key informant interviews and 16 in-depth interviews. We tape-recorded and transcribed the data. We followed thematic analysis principles to manage, analyse and interpret the data. We constantly identified and compared themes and sub-themes in the dataset as we read the transcripts. We used illuminating verbatim quotations to illustrate major findings.

Results: The commonly identified HRSB behaviours include; transactional sex, sexual predation, multiple partners, early marriages and forced marriages. Breakdown of the social structure due to conflict had resulted in economic destruction and a perceived soaring of vulnerable people whose propensity to HRSB is high. Dishonour of sexual sanctity through transactional sex and practices like incest mirrored the consequence of exposure to conflict. HRSB was associated with concentration of people in camps where idleness and unemployment were the norm. Reports of girls and women who had been victims of rape and defilement by men with guns were common. Many people were known to have started to display persistent worries, hopelessness, and suicidal ideas and to abuse alcohol.

Conclusions: The study demonstrated that conflicts disrupt the socio-cultural set up of communities and destroy sources of people's livelihood. Post-conflict socio-economic reconstruction needs to encompass programmes that restructure people's morals and values through counselling. HIV/AIDS prevention programming in post-conflict communities should deal with socio-cultural disruptions that emerged during conflicts. Some of the disruptions if not dealt with, could become normalized yet they are predisposing factors to HRSB. Socio-economic vulnerability as a consequence of conflict seemed to be associated with HRSB through alterations in sexual morality. To pursue safer sexual health choices, people in post-conflict communities need life skills.

PubMed Disclaimer

Similar articles

Cited by

References

    1. Samarasinghe S, Donaldson B, McGinn C. Africa Bureau's Office of Sustainable Development Crisis Mitigation and Response. USAID Arlington, VA. Tulane Institute for International Development; Conflict Vulnerability Analysis Workbook: Issues, Tools & Responses 2001.http://www.certi.org/publications/Manuals/CVA.pdf - PubMed
    1. ‘Ministry of Finance Planning and Economic Development, Office of the Prime Minister and Office of the President. Post-Conflict Reconstruction: The Case of Northern Uganda. Republic of Uganda Discussion Paper 7 (Draft) April 2003. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/UGANDAEXTN/Resources/CG2003.pdf
    1. Uganda Bureau of Statistics. Uganda National Household Survey 2009/10; Socio-Economic Module: An Abridged Report. November, 2010. http://www.ubos.org/UNHS0910/unhs200910.pdf
    1. Ba O, O'Regan C, Nachega J, Cooper C, Anema A, Rachlis B, Mills EJ. HIV/AIDS in African Militaries: An Ecological Analysis. Medicine, Conflict and Survival. 2008;24(2):88–100. doi: 10.1080/13623690801950260. - DOI - PubMed
    1. Bukuluki P, Mugumya F, Neema S, Ochen EA. Gender Dimensions, Food Security, and HIV and AIDS in Internally Displaced People's (IDPs) Camps in Uganda: Implications for HIV-Responsive Policy and Programming 2008. Regional Network on AIDS, Livelihoods and Food Security (RENEWAL) Coordinated by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) http://programs.ifpri.org/renewal/pdf/IDPUganda.pdf

LinkOut - more resources