Center for Research and Education on Gender and Sexuality, San Francisco State University, 835 Market Street, Suite 523, San Francisco, CA, 94103, USA,
Arch Sex Behav. 2014 May;43(4):697-706. doi: 10.1007/s10508-013-0146-5. Epub 2013 Aug 3.
Among gay and bisexual men, primary partners are a leading source of HIV infection. Trust, intimacy, and advancements in HIV treatment may impact same-sex male (SSM) couples' decisions to engage in unprotected anal intercourse (UAI). This qualitative study explored how Black, White and interracial couples discussed, and made decisions regarding condoms. Qualitative interviews were conducted with 48 SSM couples in the New York and San Francisco metropolitan areas. Stratified purposive sampling was used to include Black (n = 16), White (n = 17), and interracial (Black-White) (n = 15) couples. Twenty-six couples were concordant HIV-negative and 22 were HIV-discordant. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, coded, and analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Some couples described explicit processes, which involved active discussion, while others described implicit processes, where condom-use decisions occurred without any explicit discussion. These processes also differed by race and HIV status. Black couples tended to report condom-use as "just understood." White, HIV-discordant couples decided not to use condoms, with some identifying the HIV-positive partner's suppressed viral load and high CD4 count as deciding factors. After an unplanned episode of UAI, White, HIV-negative couples tended to discontinue condom use while Black HIV-negative couples decided to revert to using condoms. HIV prevention efforts focused on same-sex, male couples must consider the explicit/implicit nature of condom decision-making processes. Understanding differences in these processes and considering relationship dynamics, across race and HIV status, can promote the development of innovative couple-level, HIV prevention interventions.
在男同性恋和双性恋男性中,主要伴侣是 HIV 感染的主要来源。信任、亲密关系以及 HIV 治疗的进步可能会影响男同性恋(SSM)伴侣进行无保护肛交(UAI)的决定。这项定性研究探讨了黑人和白人以及跨种族夫妇如何讨论并决定使用避孕套。在纽约和旧金山大都市区对 48 对 SSM 夫妇进行了定性访谈。采用分层目的抽样法纳入黑(n = 16)、白(n = 17)和跨种族(黑-白)(n = 15)夫妇。26 对夫妇 HIV 阴性一致,22 对夫妇 HIV 不一致。使用扎根理论方法对访谈进行记录、转录、编码和分析。一些夫妇描述了明确的过程,包括积极的讨论,而另一些夫妇描述了隐含的过程,即没有任何明确讨论就做出了使用避孕套的决定。这些过程也因种族和 HIV 状况而异。黑人夫妇倾向于报告避孕套使用是“理所当然的”。HIV 不一致的白人夫妇决定不使用避孕套,一些人将 HIV 阳性伴侣的病毒载量抑制和高 CD4 计数作为决定因素。在发生意外的 UAI 后,HIV 阴性的白人夫妇往往会停止使用避孕套,而 HIV 阴性的黑人夫妇则决定恢复使用避孕套。以男同性恋男性为重点的 HIV 预防工作必须考虑避孕套决策过程的明确/隐含性质。了解这些过程的差异,并考虑到跨种族和 HIV 状况的关系动态,可以促进创新的基于夫妇的 HIV 预防干预措施的发展。