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AIDS Care
Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV
Volume 24, 2012 - Issue 5
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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Risk and protective factors related to HIV-risk behavior: A comparison between HIV-positive and HIV-negative young men who have sex with men

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Pages 544-552 | Received 26 Jul 2010, Accepted 28 Sep 2011, Published online: 31 Jan 2012
 

Abstract

The objective of this study was to assess and compare the prevalence of high-risk sexual behaviors among young HIV-negative (n=8064) and HIV-positive (n=171) men who have sex with men (MSM) on predictors of unprotected anal intercourse (UAI). Using venue-based time-space sampling, 8235 MSM aged 15–25 were anonymously surveyed as a part of the Community Intervention Trial for Youth (CITY). The Project was conducted in 13 communities across the USA from 1999 to 2002. Forty percent of HIV-positive men and 34% of HIV-negative men reported that they had UAI in the previous 3 months. HIV-positive MSM were more likely than their uninfected peers to have traded sex within the previous year, to have had sex while high during their last sexual encounter, and to have UAI with a greater number of partners. Multivariate analyses indicated that for HIV-negative men, positive peer norms regarding safer sex and being Black or Latino predicted avoidance of UAI. Among HIV-positive men, having social support for safer sex and positive peer norms predicted avoidance of UAI. Young HIV-positive MSM are a relevant subgroup for prevention because they constitute a significant source from which future infections could be generated.

Acknowledgements

The CITY Project was a multi-site cooperative agreement funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CITY Project Study Team is: John L. Peterson, Ph.D. and Derrick Reese, M.P.H. (Georgia State University, Atlanta); Leslie Clark, Ph.D., (now at University of Southern California, Los Angeles) Patrick Packer, and Charles Collins, Ph.D., (now at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) (University of Alabama at Birmingham); Robin Lin Miller, Ph.D. (now at Michigan State University) and Joseph P. Stokes, Ph.D. (University of Illinois at Chicago); Wesley Ford, M.P.H. (Los Angeles County Department of Health Services), Ellen Iverson, M.P.H., George Weiss, and Arthur Durazo (Children's Hospital, Los Angeles); David W. Seal, Ph.D., Jeffrey A. Kelly, Ph.D., Anton Somlai, Ed.D., Yvonne Stevenson, and Mike Brondino (Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee); Gary Remafedi, M.D. (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis); Lydia O'Donnell, Ed.D., Ann Stueve, Ph.D., Alexi San Doval, M.P.H. and Richard Duran, M.S.W. (Education Development Center, Newton, Massachusetts); Kyung-Hee Choi, Ph.D. and Eugene Kumekawa, Ph.D. (University of California, San Francisco); Esther Sumartojo, Ph.D., Carolyn Guenther-Grey, Sandra Wright-Fofanah, M.P.H., Lillian S. Lin, Ph.D., Joan Kraft, Ph.D., Sherri Varnell, Ph.D., and DeMarc Hickson, Ph.D. (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention).

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