Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2013 Aug 1;16(1):18476. doi: 10.7448/IAS.16.1.18476.
With HIV-incidence among men who have sex with men (MSM) in Bangkok among the highest in the world, a topical rectal microbicide would be a tremendous asset to prevention. Nevertheless, ubiquitous gaps between clinical trial efficacy and real-world effectiveness of existing HIV preventive interventions highlight the need to address multi-level factors that may impact on rectal microbicide implementation. We explored the social ecology of rectal microbicide acceptability among MSM and transgender women in Chiang Mai and Pattaya, Thailand.
We used a qualitative approach guided by a social ecological model. Five focus groups were conducted in Thai using a semi-structured interview guide. All interviews were digitally recorded, transcribed verbatim in Thai and translated into English. We conducted thematic analysis using line-by-line and axial coding and a constant comparative method. Transcripts and codes were uploaded into a customized database programmed in Microsoft Access. We then used content analysis to calculate theme frequencies by group, and Chi-square tests and Fisher's exact test to compare themes by sexual orientation/gender expression and age.
Participant's (n=37) mean age was 24.8 years (SD=4.2). The majority (70.3%) self-identified as gay, 24.3% transgender women. Product-level themes (side effects, formulation, efficacy, scent, etc.) accounted for 42%, individual (increased sexual risk, packaging/portability, timing/duration of protection) 29%, interpersonal (trust/communication, power/negotiation, stealth) 8% and social-structural (cost, access, community influence, stigma) 21% of total codes, with significant differences by sexual orientation/gender identity. The intersections of multi-level influences included product formulation and timing of use preferences contingent on interpersonal communication and partner type, in the context of constraints posed by stigma, venues for access and cost.
The intersecting influence of multi-level factors on rectal microbicide acceptability suggests that social-structural interventions to ensure widespread access, low cost and to mitigate stigma and discrimination against gay and other MSM and transgender women in the Thai health care system and broader society will support the effectiveness of rectal microbicides, in combination with other prevention technologies, in reducing HIV transmission. Education, outreach and small-group interventions that acknowledge differences between MSM and transgender women may support rectal microbicide implementation among most-at-risk populations in Thailand.
曼谷男男性行为者(MSM)中的艾滋病毒感染率位居世界之首,局部直肠杀微生物剂将成为预防的巨大助力。然而,临床试验中现有艾滋病毒预防干预措施的效果与现实世界中的效果之间普遍存在差距,这突出表明需要解决可能影响直肠杀微生物剂实施的多层次因素。我们在泰国清迈和芭堤雅探索了 MSM 和跨性别女性对直肠杀微生物剂接受度的社会生态学。
我们采用社会生态学模型指导的定性方法。使用半结构化访谈指南在泰国进行了 5 次焦点小组讨论。所有访谈均以数字形式记录,用泰语逐字记录,并翻译成英语。我们使用线对线和轴向编码以及恒比方法进行主题分析。转录本和代码上传到一个用 Microsoft Access 编程的定制数据库中。然后,我们使用内容分析按组计算主题频率,并使用卡方检验和 Fisher 精确检验按性取向/性别表达和年龄比较主题。
参与者(n=37)的平均年龄为 24.8 岁(SD=4.2)。大多数(70.3%)自认为是同性恋,24.3%是跨性别女性。产品层面的主题(副作用、配方、功效、气味等)占 42%,个人层面(增加性风险、包装/便携性、保护时间/持续时间)占 29%,人际层面(信任/沟通、权力/谈判、隐身)占 8%,社会结构层面(成本、获取途径、社区影响、耻辱感)占 21%,各主题存在显著的性取向/性别认同差异。多层次影响的交叉点包括在耻辱感、获取途径和成本的限制下,根据人际沟通和伴侣类型,对产品配方和使用时间的偏好;在泰国卫生保健系统和更广泛的社会中,确保广泛获取、低成本以及减轻对同性恋和其他 MSM 和跨性别女性的耻辱感和歧视的社会结构干预措施,将支持直肠杀微生物剂与其他预防技术相结合,以降低艾滋病毒传播。教育、外展和小团体干预措施承认 MSM 和跨性别女性之间的差异,可能有助于在泰国高危人群中实施直肠杀微生物剂。