Background <p>Despite ongoing prevention efforts, rates of consistent condom use and testing for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/sexually transmitted infections (STI) remain low in Chile. Understanding how individual and socio-structural behavioral determinants influence these prevention behaviors is essential to developing effective interventions.</p> Methods <p>We analyzed nationally representative data from the ENSSEX 2022–2023 survey (<i>n</i> = 20,392), mapping 44 behavioral indicators to the COM-B model and the Theoretical Domains Framework. Multivariable logistic regression models assessed associations between behavioral determinants and two key outcomes: consistent condom use and HIV/STI testing, adjusted by sex and other covariates.</p> Results <p>Consistent condom use was reported by 15.5% of respondents, and HIV/STI testing by 23.1%. Injunctive norms favoring condom use were strongly associated with consistent condom use (aOR = 1.89), while access to sexual health services (aOR = 2.07) and PrEP awareness (aOR = 1.67) were strongly associated with HIV/STI testing. General knowledge about HIV was not independently associated with either behavior after adjustment.</p> Conclusions <p>In this cross-sectional study of a nationally representative sample of Chilean adults, socio-structural factors—particularly injunctive norms and access to sexual health services—showed stronger and more consistent associations with condom use and HIV/STI testing than did knowledge-related factors after multivariable adjustment. These findings highlight the need for comprehensive, culturally tailored, multi-component interventions that integrate structural, normative, and motivational elements to enhance HIV/STI prevention in Chile and similar settings.</p> Trial registration <p>Not applicable.</p>

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Socio-structural and individual determinants of HIV/STI prevention behaviors in Chile: a national cross-sectional analysis

  • Giuliano Duarte-Anselmi,
  • Susana Sanduvete-Chaves,
  • Daniel López-Arenas,
  • Salvador Chacón-Moscoso

摘要

Background

Despite ongoing prevention efforts, rates of consistent condom use and testing for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/sexually transmitted infections (STI) remain low in Chile. Understanding how individual and socio-structural behavioral determinants influence these prevention behaviors is essential to developing effective interventions.

Methods

We analyzed nationally representative data from the ENSSEX 2022–2023 survey (n = 20,392), mapping 44 behavioral indicators to the COM-B model and the Theoretical Domains Framework. Multivariable logistic regression models assessed associations between behavioral determinants and two key outcomes: consistent condom use and HIV/STI testing, adjusted by sex and other covariates.

Results

Consistent condom use was reported by 15.5% of respondents, and HIV/STI testing by 23.1%. Injunctive norms favoring condom use were strongly associated with consistent condom use (aOR = 1.89), while access to sexual health services (aOR = 2.07) and PrEP awareness (aOR = 1.67) were strongly associated with HIV/STI testing. General knowledge about HIV was not independently associated with either behavior after adjustment.

Conclusions

In this cross-sectional study of a nationally representative sample of Chilean adults, socio-structural factors—particularly injunctive norms and access to sexual health services—showed stronger and more consistent associations with condom use and HIV/STI testing than did knowledge-related factors after multivariable adjustment. These findings highlight the need for comprehensive, culturally tailored, multi-component interventions that integrate structural, normative, and motivational elements to enhance HIV/STI prevention in Chile and similar settings.

Trial registration

Not applicable.