Department of Social and Behavioural Health Sciences, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Tokyo College, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
PLoS One. 2023 Sep 20;18(9):e0291550. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0291550. eCollection 2023.
Gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM) college students in China have unique sexual health challenges, including a higher risk of HIV infection, stigma and discrimination against LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) population, and limited access to LGBTQ-affirmative sexual health support. Nonetheless, previous research or policymaking has rarely addressed the students' needs for sexual health support from their perspectives. This study aims to explore GBMSM college students' perceptions and attitudes to current sexual health resources, the challenges they encounter, and their expectations to acquiring LGBTQ-affirmative sexual health information and services. The exploration was carried out through field visits and in-depth interviews with 26 GBMSM college students and eight relevant stakeholders in five cities in China. Qualitative thematic analysis was applied to the interview transcripts and fieldwork memos. Four themes emerged around the preference and needs of GBMSM students in dealing with their sexual health challenges: the association between tackling sexual health challenges and entering LGBTQ communities, the roles of emotional attachment in shaping the preference for HIV-related care and support, the desired modes of acquiring sexual health support, and the current unmet service needs. We discovered that the information-and-care-seeking behaviors of GBMSM college students are highly influenced by and connected to their participation in online and in-person LGBTQ communities. Due to the overall stigmatizing sociocultural environment of LGBTQ in China, GBMSM college students tend to rely on LGBTQ communities, seeking trust and a sense of belongingness for tackling their sexual health challenges. Conventional school-based sexual health educational programs, which often apply top-down, stigma-and-fear-based, and non-LGBTQ-inclusive teaching strategies, rarely help GBMSM college students to solve sexual health problems in real life. GBMSM college students are eager to have LGBTQ-affirmative "health managers" who can understand their emotional experiences and interpersonal contexts and assist them with sexual health issues. However, such support is generally perceived as limited by the students. Our study highlights these unmet needs of the GBMSM students and emphasizes the importance of developing future LGBTQ-affirmative sexual health programs among Chinese GBMSM college students and young GBMSM in general.
中国的男同性恋、双性恋和其他与男性发生性关系的男性(GBMSM)大学生面临着独特的性健康挑战,包括感染 HIV 的风险较高、对 LGBTQ(女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别和酷儿)人群的污名和歧视,以及获得 LGBTQ 肯定的性健康支持的机会有限。尽管如此,以前的研究或政策制定很少从学生的角度解决他们对性健康支持的需求。本研究旨在探讨 GBMSM 大学生对当前性健康资源的看法和态度、他们遇到的挑战,以及他们对获得 LGBTQ 肯定的性健康信息和服务的期望。通过在中国五个城市对 26 名 GBMSM 大学生和 8 名相关利益相关者进行实地考察和深入访谈,进行了探索。对访谈记录和实地考察记录进行了定性主题分析。围绕 GBMSM 学生应对性健康挑战的偏好和需求,出现了四个主题:解决性健康挑战与进入 LGBTQ 社区之间的关联、情感依恋在塑造对 HIV 相关护理和支持的偏好方面的作用、获取性健康支持的理想模式,以及当前未满足的服务需求。我们发现,GBMSM 大学生的信息和寻求护理行为受到他们参与在线和面对面的 LGBTQ 社区的高度影响和联系。由于中国 LGBTQ 整体污名化的社会文化环境,GBMSM 大学生倾向于依赖 LGBTQ 社区,寻求信任和归属感,以应对他们的性健康挑战。由于中国 LGBTQ 整体污名化的社会文化环境,GBMSM 大学生倾向于依赖 LGBTQ 社区,寻求信任和归属感,以应对他们的性健康挑战。由于中国 LGBTQ 整体污名化的社会文化环境,GBMSM 大学生倾向于依赖 LGBTQ 社区,寻求信任和归属感,以应对他们的性健康挑战。由于中国 LGBTQ 整体污名化的社会文化环境,GBMSM 大学生倾向于依赖 LGBTQ 社区,寻求信任和归属感,以应对他们的性健康挑战。由于中国 LGBTQ 整体污名化的社会文化环境,GBMSM 大学生倾向于依赖 LGBTQ 社区,寻求信任和归属感,以应对他们的性健康挑战。常规的基于学校的性健康教育计划,通常采用自上而下、基于污名和恐惧的、不包容 LGBTQ 的教学策略,很少能帮助 GBMSM 大学生解决现实生活中的性健康问题。GBMSM 大学生渴望有能够理解他们的情感体验和人际关系背景并帮助他们解决性健康问题的 LGBTQ 肯定的“健康管理者”。然而,这种支持通常被认为是有限的。我们的研究强调了这些 GBMSM 学生的未满足需求,并强调了为中国的 GBMSM 大学生和一般年轻的 GBMSM 开发未来的 LGBTQ 肯定的性健康计划的重要性。