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Research Article

Exploring Current Stereotypes and Norms Impacting Sexual Partner HIV-Status Communication

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Pages 1376-1385 | Published online: 30 Jun 2019
 

ABSTRACT

This study sought to explore HIV-related stereotypes and norms that impact HIV-status communication with potential sexual partners. A series of focus groups and in-depth interviews were conducted (N = 59) with HIV-positive and HIV-negative MSM (75%) and Heterosexuals (25%). Findings indicate that HIV stereotypes and stigma remain as barriers to HIV-status discussion. Differences also emerged across groups: 1) HIV-negative MSM were more likely to report engaging in HIV-status communication, 2) HIV-positive MSM described inconsistent HIV-status communication and reported concealing their status at times, and 3) Heterosexuals reported being least likely to engage in HIV-status communication; often using the blanket question “Are you clean?” to encompass all STIs and avoiding direct HIV-status discussion. Overall, findings indicate that many HIV stereotypes and stigma-related communication norms persist that discourage discussion of sexual partners’ HIV-status prior to sexual activity.

Additional information

Funding

The study was funded by a University of Cincinnati Research Council (URC) Interdisciplinary Grant (Haas, Lyons Co–PIs).

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