教育女性和教育男性:博茨瓦纳教育改革对性别特异性性行为与人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的影响

To educate a woman and to educate a man: Gender‐specific sexual behavior and human immunodeficiency virus responses to an education reform in Botswana

Health Economics · 2020
被引 6
人大 A-

中文导读

利用博茨瓦纳四次全国调查数据,研究发现初中教育改革使女性推迟首次性行为、缩短初婚间隔并降低HIV感染风险,但男性风险性行为增加,可能源于收入效应。

Abstract

This study analyses mechanisms that link education to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) with a focus on gender differences, using data from four nationally representative surveys in Botswana. To estimate the causal effect, an exogenous 1-year increase of junior secondary school is used. The key finding is that women and men responded differently to the reform. Among women, it led to delayed sexual debut and reduced time between first sex and marriage by up to a year. Among men, risky sex, measured by the likelihood of concurrent sexual partnerships and paying for sex, increased. The increase in risky sex among men is likely to be due to the education reform's positive impact on income. The reform reduced the likelihood of HIV infection sharply among women, especially among relatively young women age 18-24. The impact on men's likelihood of HIV infection is uncertain.

教育改革性别差异性行为HIV感染