Resumen
Evidence indicates that social cohesion is a successful strategy to improve consistent condom use (CCU) among female sex
workers. However, the individual and layered or combined effect that various types of overlapping stigmas may have on CCU
between female sex workers living with HIV and their clients and steady partners has not been analyzed. Drawing on the Abriendo
Puertas cohort of female sex workers living with HIV in the Dominican Republic, we used structural equation modeling to test
the hypothesis that both HIV stigma and sex work stigma mediate the association between social cohesion and CCU and that
they have a layered effect. The results indicated that HIV stigma mediated the association between social cohesion and CCU
with clients and partners, while sex work-related stigma did not. There was no evidence of a layered HIV stigma and sex work
stigma effect, which may be due to methodological limitations to handle highly correlated latent variables. Findings highlight
the need to address internalized HIV stigma within the context of community-based approaches to enhance their HIV prevention
impact. This will help to reduce the risk of HIV re-infection with a new distinct HIV viral strain, STI infection, and onward HIV
transmission among female sex workers living with HIV.