“又是一种同性恋疾病”:一种交叉定性方法,从多个角度描述了美国在猴痘疫情期间年轻男同性恋、双性恋和其他性少数群体男性的生活经历。

"It's another gay disease": an intersectional qualitative approach contextualizing the lived experiences of young gay, bisexual, and other sexual minoritized men in the United States during the mpox outbreak.

机构信息

Yale School of Public Health, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 60 College Street, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA.

Yale School of Medicine, Division of Prevention and Community Research, 389 Whitney Avenue, New Haven, CT, 06516, USA.

出版信息

BMC Public Health. 2024 Jun 11;24(1):1574. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-19062-z.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The U.S. mpox outbreak in 2022 introduced new and exacerbated existing challenges that disproportionately stigmatize gay, bisexual, and other sexual minoritized men (GBSMM). This study contextualizes the perceptions, susceptibility, and lived experiences of the mpox outbreak among GBSMM in the U.S. using an intersectional framework.

METHODS

Between September 2022 to February 2023, we conducted 33 semi-structured qualitative interviews with purposively sampled GBSMM in the Northeast and the South region of the United States on various aspects related to their experience during the mpox outbreak.

RESULTS

We identified four themes: (1) understanding and conceptualizations of mpox, (2) mpox vaccine availability and accessibility, (3) mpox vaccine hesitancy and mistrust, and (4) call to action and recommendations. GBSMM collectively discussed the elevated mpox stigmatization and homophobic discourse from mainstream social media and news outlets. GBSMM also discussed the lack of availability of mpox vaccines, unclear procedures to receive the vaccine, and continued mistrust in government, non-government, and other institutions of health that were complicit in anti-LGBTQ + narratives related to mpox. However, they expressed that these challenges may be addressed through more LGTBQ + representation and leveraging ways to empower these communities.

CONCLUSION

GBSMM have mpox experiences that are distinct and multifaceted. Effectively addressing mpox and mitigating public health emergencies for GBSMM requires prioritizing destigmatizing communication channels and vaccine distribution strategies by centering their stories and lived experiences to advance health equity.

摘要

背景

2022 年美国猴痘疫情带来了新的挑战,加剧了对男同性恋、双性恋和其他性少数群体男性(GBSMM)的歧视。本研究使用交叉框架,从感知、易感性和生活经历方面,在美国 GBSMM 中对猴痘疫情进行了分析。

方法

2022 年 9 月至 2023 年 2 月,我们对美国东北部和南部地区的 GBSMM 进行了 33 次半结构化定性访谈,内容涉及他们在猴痘疫情期间的各种经历。

结果

我们确定了四个主题:(1)对猴痘的理解和概念化,(2)猴痘疫苗的可获得性和可及性,(3)猴痘疫苗犹豫和不信任,以及(4)行动呼吁和建议。GBSMM 共同讨论了主流社交媒体和新闻媒体上猴痘污名化和恐同言论的升级。GBSMM 还讨论了猴痘疫苗的供应不足、接受疫苗的程序不明确以及对政府、非政府和其他卫生机构的持续不信任,这些机构在与猴痘相关的反 LGBTQ ⁇ 叙述中是同谋。然而,他们表示,这些挑战可以通过增加 LGBTQ ⁇ 代表性和利用赋予这些社区权力的方式来解决。

结论

GBSMM 对猴痘的体验是独特和多方面的。为了有效应对猴痘疫情,减轻对 GBSMM 的公共卫生紧急情况,需要通过以他们的故事和生活经历为中心来优先考虑去污名化的沟通渠道和疫苗分发策略,以推进健康公平。

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