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Original Articles

Environmental, Psychosocial, and Individual Correlates of HIV Risk in Ethnic Minority Male-to-Female Transgender Youth

, , , &
Pages 89-104 | Received 24 Jan 2006, Accepted 15 May 2006, Published online: 04 Oct 2008
 

Abstract

Although HIV risk in male-to-female (MTF) transgender adults is well documented, limited data exists on the experiences of MTF transgender youth. This cross-sectional study examines environmental, psychosocial, and individual correlates of risky sex among 51 MTF ethnie minority transgender youth age 16-25. Fifty-nine percent of participants reported high-risk sex defined as either unprotected insertive or receptive anal intercourse in the past year. Multiple factors that included higher depression scores, lower self-esteem, less social support, poorer safer sex communication skills, being non-African American, use of injection silicone, history of arrest, history of forced sex and having sex while high on drugs/alcohol, were significantly associated with high-risk sex among participants. Multivariate logistic regression indicated that among possible models with two independent variables, poorer communication skills and non-African American race/ethnicity were the most significant predictors of high-risk sex. Future studies examining HIV risk mechanisms in MTF transgender youth are needed.

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