Temperament and risky behaviors: a pathway to HIV?

TitleTemperament and risky behaviors: a pathway to HIV?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsMoore, D, Atkinson, JH, Akiskal, H, Gonzalez, RG, Wolfson, TJ, Grant, I
JournalJournal of Affective Disorders
Volume85
Issue1-2
Pagination191-200
Date Published03/2005
KeywordsAlcoholism, Internal, Personality Inventory, Questionnaires, Risk-Taking, Street Drugs, Temperament, Unsafe Sex
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Certain sexual behaviors and abuse of substances contribute to the risk of becoming HIV-infected. Because dispositional characteristics are likely to influence this process, we examined the association between temperament and HIV serostatus in subjects with heavy use of drugs and various sexual risk behaviors. METHODS: Two hundred and thirty individuals (81% of whom were HIV-infected) were assessed for underlying temperamental characteristics, substance use, and risky sexual behaviors. Toward this goal, a factor analysis was conducted on a new self-rated Temperament Autoquestionnaire (Temperament Evaluation of Memphis, Pisa, Paris and San Diego-Autoquestionnaire (TEMPS-A)). MANOVA was used to examine overall associations between risky behaviors and temperament. Additionally, directed MANOVAs were conducted for each of six drugs of abuse (alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, opioids, other stimulants, and sedative hypnotics). RESULTS: Factor analysis confirmed the hypothesized temperament structure of five distinct factors: Cyclothymic, hyperthymic, anxious, irritable-explosive, and depressive. Heavy users of cocaine, other stimulants, and alcohol were more likely to have an irritable-explosive temperament. Interestingly, heavy users of opioids were more likely to show depressive and hyperthymic traits. The inclusion of HIV status as a predictor of temperament did not alter the results. Unlike a previous study, no direct significant relationships were found between risky sexual behaviors and specific temperaments. LIMITATIONS: Relatively small sample size for a factor analytic study, and cross-sectional design, which cannot determine a cause and effect relationship. CONCLUSIONS: We succeeded in studying and validating five distinct affective temperaments in a substance abuse population. Irritable-explosive, and to a lesser extent, depressive and hyperthymic traits, were associated with substance use, and may place individuals at risk for HIV infection via that mechanism. That current risky sexual practices were not directly linked to temperament may reflect modification in sexual behavior following the acquisition of HIV disease.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15780689