Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 West 168th Street, Floor 5, Room 536, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
College of Public Health and Human Science, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA.
Arch Sex Behav. 2018 Oct;47(7):2091-2100. doi: 10.1007/s10508-018-1211-x. Epub 2018 Jun 20.
Research on gender and health, including research conducted among Black men who have sex with men (BMSM), has primarily focused on how gender norms and roles shape healthcare engagement. Here we advance that work by demonstrating how a broader theorization of gender, particularly one that moves beyond gender norms and performance to incorporate structures such as the healthcare system and the labor market, can facilitate an understanding of how gender affects preventive healthcare seeking among BMSM, particularly the uptake of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a promising approach to alleviate HIV disparities. This article is based on a year-long ethnographic study conducted in New York City with BMSM (n = 31; three interviews each) and community stakeholders (n = 17). Two primary findings emerged: (1) the labor market systematically excluded the men in our sample, which limited their ability to access employer-sponsored healthcare. Such discrimination may promote overt demonstrations of masculinity that increase their HIV vulnerability and decrease healthcare seeking, and (2) healthcare systems are not structured to promote preventive healthcare for men, particularly BMSM. In fact, they constrained men's access to primary providers and were usually tailored to women. Applying a structural, gendered lens to men's health-in addition to the more frequently researched individual or interpersonal levels-provides insight into factors that affect healthcare seeking and HIV prevention for BMSM. These findings have implications for the design of policies and institutional reforms that could enhance the impact of PrEP among BMSM. Findings are also relevant to the management of chronic disease among men more broadly.
关于性别与健康的研究,包括对与男性发生性关系的黑人男性(BMSM)进行的研究,主要集中在性别规范和角色如何塑造医疗保健的参与度上。在这里,我们通过展示更广泛的性别理论如何促进理解性别如何影响 BMSM 人群的预防性医疗保健寻求,特别是采用暴露前预防(PrEP),这是一种缓解 HIV 差异的有前途的方法,来推进这项工作。本文基于在纽约市对 BMSM(n=31;每人三次访谈)和社区利益相关者(n=17)进行的为期一年的民族志研究。主要有两个发现:(1)劳动力市场系统地将我们研究中的男性排除在外,这限制了他们获得雇主赞助的医疗保健的能力。这种歧视可能会促进明显的男子气概表现,增加他们的 HIV 易感性并减少医疗保健寻求,(2)医疗保健系统的设计并不是为了促进男性的预防性医疗保健,特别是 BMSM。事实上,它们限制了男性获得初级医疗服务的机会,而且通常是为女性量身定制的。除了更频繁研究的个人或人际层面外,从结构和性别角度来研究男性健康,可以深入了解影响 BMSM 人群医疗保健寻求和 HIV 预防的因素。这些发现对设计政策和机构改革具有重要意义,可以提高 PrEP 在 BMSM 中的效果。这些发现也与更广泛的男性慢性病管理有关。