Psychosocial Correlates of Unprotected Sex Without Disclosure of HIV-Positivity among African-American, Latino, and White Men Who Have Sex with Men and Women

被引:0
作者
Matt G. Mutchler
Laura M. Bogart
Marc N. Elliott
Tara McKay
Marika J. Suttorp
Mark A. Schuster
机构
[1] AIDS Project Los Angeles,Department of Sociology
[2] California State University,Department of Sociology
[3] Dominguez Hills,undefined
[4] RAND Corporation,undefined
[5] University of California,undefined
[6] Children’s Hospital Boston/Harvard Medical School,undefined
来源
Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2008年 / 37卷
关键词
HIV/AIDS; African-American; Latino; Homosexuality; Bisexuality; Sexual risk;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
African-American, Latino, and White men who have sex with men and women (MSMW) may be a bridge of HIV transmission from men to women. Very little research has directly compared culturally specific correlates of the likelihood of unprotected sex among MSMW. The present study examined psychosocial correlates of unprotected sex without disclosure of HIV status with male and female partners among 50 African American, 50 Latino, and 50 White HIV-positive MSMW recruited from AIDS service organizations in Los Angeles County. Multivariate logistic regressions were conducted to examine relationships of race/ethnicity and psychosocial variables (e.g., condom attitudes, self-efficacy for HIV disclosure, sexual identification) to unprotected sex without disclosure of HIV status, for male and female partners separately. For female partners, different effects emerged by race/ethnicity. Among African-Americans, less exclusively homosexual identification and low self-efficacy for disclosure of HIV status to female partners were associated with unprotected sex without disclosure; among Latinos, less exclusively homosexual identification and negative attitudes about condoms were significant. Participants who were more exclusively homosexually identified, who held less positive condom attitudes, and who had low self-efficacy for disclosure to female partners were more likely to have unprotected sex without disclosure of HIV status to male partners. Culturally tailored community-level interventions may help to raise awareness about HIV and bisexuality, and decrease HIV and sexual orientation stigma, thereby increasing African-American and Latino MSMW’s comfort in communicating with their female partners about sexuality, HIV and condoms. Addressing norms for condom use and disclosure between male partners is recommended, especially for homosexually identified MSMW.
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页码:736 / 747
页数:11
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