Is It the Timing? Short‑Term Mobility and Coital Frequency in Agbogbloshie, Ghana
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Springer
Abstract
Short-term mobility is often associated with increased sexual risk behavior. Mobile individuals often have higher rates of
sexual risk behavior compared to non-mobile individuals, but the reasons why are not clear. Using monthly retrospective
panel data from 202 men and 282 women in Agbogbloshie, Ghana, we tested whether short-term mobility was associated with
changes in coital frequency, and whether the association was due to the act of travel in the given month (e.g., enabling higher
risk behavior), the reason for travel, or an individual’s travel propensity at other times in the year. Overnight travel specifcally
to visit family or friends, or for education, health, or other reasons, was associated with increased coital frequency for men.
However, men with higher travel propensities had lower overall coital frequency and the act of traveling enabled more sex only
for the most frequent male travelers. Men who seldom traveled had much higher coital frequency, but the act of traveling was
not associated with additional sex acts. For women, travel for education, health, or other reasons increased coital frequency.
Occasional female travelers had slightly more sex acts compared to non-mobile women, and the act of traveling for these
women was associated with slight increases in coital frequency, supporting the enabling hypothesis. Highly mobile women had
fewer sex acts per month on average. Our fndings suggest that mobility characteristics measured on a broad temporal scale, as
well as the reason for mobility, are important to understand the relationship between short-term mobility and sexual behavior.
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Research Article