2015
DOI: 10.1093/restud/rdv028
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HIV/AIDS-related Expectations and Risky Sexual Behaviour in Malawi

Abstract: We use probabilistic expectations data elicited from survey respondents in rural Malawi to investigate how risky sexual behavior may be influenced by individuals' expectations about survival and future HIV status, which in turn depend on the perceived impact of HIV/AIDS on survival, expectations about own and partner's current HIV status, and expectations about HIV transmission rates. Subjective expectations, in particular about mortality risk but not the risk of living with HIV, play an important role in dete… Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…For example, mature adults are substantially worried about AIDS, know between 3.3 and 4.1 persons who (they suspect) have died of AIDS in the last year, estimate their own risk of HIV infection as 12 % to 21 % and that of their spouses/partners as 14 % to 24 %, and perceive a one-year mortality risk of 28 % to 38 %—the latter being a substantial overestimation of the actual mortality risk (Delavande and Kohler 2009, 2016). Moreover, these stressors exhibit modest age patterns (panel A): worries about HIV/AIDS, and the subjective probability of the respondent or his/her spouse being infected with HIV decline with age, whereas the perceived local AIDS mortality and the subjective probability of dying (self) increase with age.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, mature adults are substantially worried about AIDS, know between 3.3 and 4.1 persons who (they suspect) have died of AIDS in the last year, estimate their own risk of HIV infection as 12 % to 21 % and that of their spouses/partners as 14 % to 24 %, and perceive a one-year mortality risk of 28 % to 38 %—the latter being a substantial overestimation of the actual mortality risk (Delavande and Kohler 2009, 2016). Moreover, these stressors exhibit modest age patterns (panel A): worries about HIV/AIDS, and the subjective probability of the respondent or his/her spouse being infected with HIV decline with age, whereas the perceived local AIDS mortality and the subjective probability of dying (self) increase with age.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As described in section 3.2, in each location we interviewed a random sample of 'network members' who were not part of treatment T3 by design, and thus could not have been directly in ‡uenced by Shuga. To test whether people who watched Shuga passed on any of the e¤ects to friends who did not watch it, in Table 9 we estimate model (14).…”
Section: Spilloversmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By 2006, 95 percent of respondents had heard of ART, which was at the time available in urban and peri-urban areas of Malawi. Many MLSFH respondents already had relatively accurate perceptions of the effect of ART on mortality of HIV+ persons: for example, when asked in 2006 about survival probabilities of hypothetical HIV+ individuals, they reported substantially higher five-and ten-year survival rates for HIV+ persons on ART treatment as compared to HIV+ persons not on treatment (Delavande and Kohler 2016). However, there may still be learning about the longer-term longevity of patients on ART.…”
Section: __mentioning
confidence: 99%