D. Schopper et al., SEXUAL BEHAVIORS RELEVANT TO HIV TRANSMISSION IN A RURAL AFRICAN POPULATION - HOW MUCH CAN A KAP SURVEY TELL US, Social science & medicine, 37(3), 1993, pp. 401-412
KAP surveys have been proposed as a means to gather quantitative infor
mation on AIDS-related sexual behaviors, but the validity of survey re
sults has not been tested. The validity of data gathered during a KAP
survey in a rural district in Northern Uganda (N = 1486) was examined
analyzing expected behavioral patterns, agreement of partner reports,
and concordance of number of sexual contacts across gender. Patterns o
f sexual behavior and age trends are as expected. More men (50%) than
women (18.5%) reported premarital sex. The likelihood of sexual interc
ourse before marriage increases with age at first marriage and with ed
ucation. Women marry 5 years earlier than men, and the number of marri
ages increases with age. Peak incidence of casual sex occurs before ag
e 25. The male/female ratio of casual sex is 4, as compared to about 3
in other African surveys. Single men are 2.5 times more likely to eng
age in casual sex than married males. Agreement of partner reports was
examined for 392 couples selected by chance. 86% of the couples agree
d on being polygamous or monogamous. On average men reported 1.3 (SD =
0.7) wives as compared to women reporting 1.5 (SD = 0.89) wives (P <
0.001). 16.8% of women declared more, and 2.8% less cowives than their
husband (r = 0.65). Self-reports on frequency of sexual intercourse i
n the past month were examined for 256 monogamous couples. Mean freque
ncies differ (5.24 +/- 5.1 for men, 4.43 +/- 4.7 for women, P < 0.001)
. 42.8% of couples are in agreement within +/-1 unit (r = 0.44). The t
otal number of extra-marital and marital sex acts, as well as the tota
l number of partners reported by each gender are similar. There is, ho
wever, a striking gender difference in reporting of casual partners in
the past year. Data were found to be accurate at the aggregate level.
However, accuracy of reporting at the individual level was found to b
e low. The gender difference in reporting of casual partners may be du
e to female underreporting, to not having captured prostitutes or to a
different perception of the meaning of casual partnership. All KAP su
rveys should include a validity analysis, so as to provide a sense of
the accuracy of the surveys and allow for comparison of the quality of
different KAP surveys. There is an urgent need for a standardized app
roach to validating the findings from AIDS-related KAP surveys. Some o
f the indirect methods described here could be relevant for further us
e.