Ternyata Director Elizabeth Pisani is also an author, writing about sex, science and HIV at her blog and personal site

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HIV, STIs and risk behaviour in Dili, East Timor, 2003
hdl:1902.1/12206 UNF:3:R6UHkwlqseazLQSulnWYWQ==
Version: 1 – Released: Thu Jul 23 11:54:08 EDT 2009
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Data Citation Details
SubtitleA study of sexual and drug-taking behaviour among gay men, sex workers and client groups
Study Global IDhdl:1902.1/12206
AuthorsElizabeth Pisani; Hari Purnomo; Aang Sutrisna; Angelina Asy; Mynt Zaw; Heather Bull; Carlos Tilman; Graham Neilsen
ProducerMinistry of Health, Republic of East Timor
Distributor ContactElizabeth Pisani, pisani@ternyata.org
Deposit DateDecember 28, 2008
Provenance
Abstract and Scope
Abstract

Background: East Timor is a newly independent, poor nation with many internally displaced people and foreign peace keeping forces. Similarities with Cambodia, which now has Asia’s worst HIV epidemic, caused donors to earmark money for HIV prevention in East Timor, but no data were available to plan appropriate programmes. Objectives: To determine levels of infection with HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and associated risk behaviours in Dili, East Timor, in order to guide resource allocation and appropriate prevention and care strategies. Methods: In mid-2003, a cross sectional survey of female sex workers, men who have sex with men (MSM), taxi drivers, and soldiers was conducted. Participants provided biological specimens and all answered structured questionnaires. Results: HIV prevalence was 3% among female sex workers (3/100), 0.9% among MSM (1/110), and zero in the other groups. All the HIV infected sex workers reported sex with foreign clients. Partner turnover reported by all groups was among the lowest in Asia, so was condom use. Access to basic HIV prevention services, including condoms and STI services, was extremely low in all groups. Conclusions: A few sex workers are infected with HIV in East Timor, but the virus is not circulating widely among their clients, and sexual networking is limited. The risk of a generalised HIV epidemic in East Timor is minimal. HIV can be contained by the provision of basic services to the small minority of the population at highest risk, preserving resources for other health and development needs.

KeywordsHIV (MeSH); East Timor; Timor Leste; Timor Lorosae; Sexually Transmitted Infections (MeSH); STI (MeSH); syphillis (MeSH); chlamydia (MeSH); gonorrhoea (MeSH); MSM (MeSH); commercial sex; sexual behaviour
Topic ClassificationHIV/AIDS; East Timor; risk behaviour
Related PublicationsPisani, E. and Dili survey team (2004) HIV, STIs and Risk Behaviour in East Timor: an historic opportunity for effective action. Dili, East Timor ; Pisani E, Purnomo H, Sutrisna A et al., "Basing policy on evidence: low HIV, STIs and risk behaviour in Dili, East Timor argue for more focused interventions." Sexually Transmitted Infections, 2006 Feb;82(1):88-93 doi:10.1136/sti.2005.015602
Time Period Covered2003 - 2003
Date of CollectionAugust, 2003 - August, 2003
Country/NationEast Timor
Geographic CoverageDili
Geographic UnitCapital City
UniverseGroups at high risk for HIV: homosexual men (MSM), female sex workers (FSW), taxi drivers, male soldiers
Kind of DataBiomarkers: HIV, syphilis, gonorrhoea, chlamydia, trichomonas (females only). For homosexual men, rectal gonorrhoea and chlamydia. Socio-demographic data. Data on risk behaviour: sexual partnerships, condom use, sexual practices. HIV-related kowledge, testing history.
Data Availability
Number of Files 9
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You are welcome to download and use these data for purposes consistent with the arrpoved study aims (see the approved study protocol or field guides). All study documentation and data can be freely downloaded. I believe easy access to data for secondary use pushes forward the research agenda while reducing expensive duplication, but not everyone believes the same. To help me and others make the case and increase access, you could simply send a quick e-mail to Eizabeth Pisani mentioning why you are interested in the data, how you discovered it, and how you're thinking of using either the data or the documentation. A LOT of work went in to the collection and documentation of these data. It would seem both fair and honorable if you post analysis files back to the site in a publicly accessible form (if in doubt, e-mail them to Elizabeth). If the data are transformed or combined with data from other sources, the transformed data should be posted on the same terms as the original data set. Thanks for working together towards Open Science.
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"HIV, STIs and risk behaviour in Dili, East Timor, 2003", hdl:1902.1/12206