ABSTRACT
Data from a 1993-1994 survey of 150 black and Hispanic teenagers were used to examine differences in HIV risk-related behavior between young women who have a first sexual partner three or more years older than themselves and those whose first partner is their age. Compared with teenagers whose first partner had been roughly their age, the 35% of adolescents with an older partner had been younger at first intercourse (13.8 years vs. 14.6) and less likely to use a condom at first intercourse (63% vs. 82%). They also were less likely to report having used a condom at last intercourse (29% vs. 44%) or having used condoms consistently over their lifetime (37% vs. 56%) or in the previous six months (44% vs. 66%). Some 38% of teenagers with an older first partner had ever been pregnant, compared with 12% of those with a peer-age first partner. The mean number of partners and history of sexually transmitted diseases did not differ between the two groups.
Subject(s)
Black or African American , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Hispanic or Latino , Risk-Taking , Sexual Partners , Adolescent , Age Factors , Alabama/epidemiology , Condoms , Female , Humans , Male , New York City , Pregnancy , Pregnancy in Adolescence , Puerto Rico , Sexually Transmitted DiseasesABSTRACT
It is known that a sugar meal is a prerequisite for the transmission of Leishmania by sandflies in the laboratory. Lutzomyia peruensis the proven vector of Leishmania peruviana, was caught by aspiration from crevices in rocks near Chaute in the Rimac Valley, Peru, cryopreserved and analysed for sugars using HPLC. The major sugars present are glucose and fructose as well as smaller amounts of sucrose, maltose, melibiose, turanose and a trisaccharide, probably raffinose. The results indicate that the major carbohydrate sugar meal of Lutzomyia peruensis is aphid honeydew. This is the first report of such behaviour in Neotropical sandflies.