Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Division of Public Health Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, USA.
Cult Health Sex. 2010 Oct;12(7):797-812. doi: 10.1080/13691058.2010.492432.
A community-based participatory research partnership explored HIV risk and potentially effective intervention characteristics to reduce exposure and transmission among immigrant Latino men who have sex with men living in the rural south-eastern USA. Twenty-one participants enrolled and completed a total of 62 ethnographic in-depth interviews. Mean age was 31 (range 18-48) years and English-language proficiency was limited; 18 participants were from Mexico. Four participants reported having sex with men and women during the past three months; two participants self-identified as male-to-female transgender. Qualitative themes that emerged included a lack of accurate information about HIV and prevention; the influence of social-political contexts to sexual risk; and barriers to healthcare services. We also identified eight characteristics of potentially effective interventions for HIV prevention. Our findings suggest that socio-political contexts must be additional targets of change to reduce and eliminate HIV health disparities experienced by immigrant Latino men who have sex with men.
一个基于社区的参与式研究伙伴关系探索了 HIV 风险和潜在有效的干预特征,以减少生活在美国东南部农村地区的与男性发生性关系的移民拉丁裔男性的暴露和传播。21 名参与者报名并完成了总共 62 次人种学深度访谈。平均年龄为 31 岁(范围为 18-48 岁),英语水平有限;18 名参与者来自墨西哥。四名参与者报告在过去三个月中与男性和女性发生过性关系;两名参与者自认为是跨性别女性。出现的定性主题包括缺乏有关 HIV 和预防的准确信息;社会政治背景对性风险的影响;以及获得医疗保健服务的障碍。我们还确定了八项潜在有效的 HIV 预防干预措施的特征。我们的研究结果表明,必须将社会政治背景作为改变的额外目标,以减少和消除与男性发生性关系的移民拉丁裔男性所经历的艾滋病毒健康差距。