Mining and HIV/AIDS Transmission Among Marampa Mining Communities in Lunsar, Sierra Leone

Type Thesis or Dissertation - Doctor of Philosophy
Title Mining and HIV/AIDS Transmission Among Marampa Mining Communities in Lunsar, Sierra Leone
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
URL http://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2641&context=dissertations
Abstract
Since the human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome
(HIV/AIDS) was first reported in Sierra Leone in 1987, its prevalence rate has stabilized
at 1.5% in the nation’s general population. However, concerns exist regarding the
potential increase in high-risk populations, particularly among mineworkers and
commercial sex workers. The potential spread of HIV/AIDS as a result of labor migration
may threaten the mining sector, which has been identified as a critical driver of recent
economic growth and development. A gap remains in the literature regarding the
contextual factors in mining communities that lead to high rates of HIV/AIDS. Therefore,
the purpose of this study was to quantitatively examine the association between labor
migration and of sexual risk behaviors among mineworkers in the Marampa Mines in
Lunsar, Sierra Leone. Grounded in the ecological model and using a cross-sectional
design, 296 mineworkers from the Marampa mining communities were surveyed using a
standardized survey questionnaire. Research questions were answered using simple linear
and binary logistic regression analyses. Analyses of the results indicated a significant
relationship between labor migration and condom self-efficacy, where migrants were
predicted to have condom self-efficacy scores 7 times higher than nonmigrants. However,
the results showed no statistically significant relationship between labor migration and
engagement in multiple sexual partnerships and commercial sex among the mineworkers.
These findings will provide important implications for positive social change in the
development of multilevel HIV intervention programs to reduce sexual risk behaviors
that transmit HIV, thereby improving the health and wellbeing of miners and that of their
partners and families in the mining communities.

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