This book is about muny activism around HIV/AIDS Atralia. It looks at the role that the gay muny played the social, medil and polil rp...
Contents:
- HIV STIGMA BY ASSOCIATN AMONG ATRALIAN GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN : AIDS
- HIV CINCE FELL BY THREE-QUARTERS ATRALIAN GAY MEN, WH STRONG ASSOCIATN WH TREATMENT AS PREVENTN
- FEWER NDOMS, BUT MORE SAFER SEX: HISTORIC SHIFTS AMONG ATRALIAN GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN
- HIV STIGMA BY ASSOCIATN AMONG ATRALIAN GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN
HIV STIGMA BY ASSOCIATN AMONG ATRALIAN GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN : AIDS
Sce the start of the epimic, gay and bisexual men (GBM) and people who ject dgs have been portrayed as sourc of HIV bee of their behavurs (or inti), poundg historil forms of stigma (such as the pathologizatn of same-sex attractn or illic dg e). The current survey targeted gay, bisexual, and other MSM, and vtigated stigma related to their sexual inty, wh an addnal foc on HIV stigma. ‘How much do you feel part of a gay/bisexual muny?
The centraly of participants’ sexual inty was measured g a four-em subsle of the Lbian, Gay and Bisexual Inty Sle [39] (e. Consistent wh Atralian HIV behavural surveillance recment methods [41, 42], advertisements were targeted to men over the age of 18 years who lived Atralia and whose Facebook profil clud any LGBTI-related terts, such as ‘same sex relatnship’, ‘gay iendly’, ‘LGBT social movements’, or ‘LGBT culture’.
Table 2 par non-HIV-posive participants who reported ever experiencg HIV stigma by associatn wh those who had never experienced such stigma terms of their mographic characteristics, sexual behavur, HIV and STI-ttg practic, GBM muny attachment, sexual inty centraly, psychologil distrs, sexual inty stigma and rejectn of potential sex 2: Bivariate parisons between HIV-negative and untted gay and bisexual men who had never or ever experienced HIV stigma by the bivariate level, there were no mographic differenc between the two groups. 1: Standardized regrsn efficients for the relatnship between gay and bisexual men muny attachment and psychologil distrs, mediated by HIV ttg equency and HIV stigma by associatn (ntrollg for sexual inty stigma).
HIV CINCE FELL BY THREE-QUARTERS ATRALIAN GAY MEN, WH STRONG ASSOCIATN WH TREATMENT AS PREVENTN
2: Standardized regrsn efficients for the relatnship between gay and bisexual men muny attachment and rejectg sex partners for beg HIV-posive, mediated by HIV ttg equency and HIV stigma by associatn (ntrollg for sexual inty stigma). The rults suggt that the endurg effects of HIV stigma and the layerg of stigma associated wh homosexualy persist society [18], wh many GBM ntug to feel as though others perceive them to be at risk of HIV acquisn. Psychologil threat avoidance as a barrier to HIV ttg gay/bisexual men.
Stigma, gay men and bmedil preventn: the challeng and opportuni of a rapidly changg HIV preventn landspe. ‘Triply cursed’: racism, homophobia and HIV-related stigma are barriers to regular HIV ttg, treatment adherence and disclosure among young Black gay men. Anticipated HIV stigma and lays regular HIV ttg behavrs among sexually-active young gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex wh men and transgenr women.
FEWER NDOMS, BUT MORE SAFER SEX: HISTORIC SHIFTS AMONG ATRALIAN GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN
The impact of homophobia and HIV stigma on HIV ttg uptake among Che men who have sex wh men: a mediatn analysis. Risk and protective factors associated wh gay neighborhood rince. HIV-related stigma wh muni of gay men: a lerature review.
Adaptg behavural surveillance to antiretroviral-based HIV preventn: reviewg and anticipatg trends the Atralian Gay Communy Perdic Surveys.
HIV STIGMA BY ASSOCIATN AMONG ATRALIAN GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN
Revisn and extensn of a multidimensnal measure of sexual mory inty: the Lbian, Gay, and Bisexual Inty Sle. Gay Communy Perdic Survey: Sydney 2019.
Gay Communy Perdic Survey: Melbourne 2019. Keywords:muny; gay and bisexual men; HIV; stigma.
HIV treatment as preventn, as measured muny-level viral supprsn, was strongly associated wh a large drop the number of new HIV fectns among gay and bisexual men Atralia, even before PrEP was available. Dpe the clear benefs of treatment as preventn (or Untectable = Untransmtable, U=U) at the dividual level, no large-sle studi have yet evaluated the muny-level effects of treatment as preventn (TasP) on direct measur of HIV cince among gay and bisexual men. One of the challeng wh the Ain studi is that they treated the populatn as homogeno rather than nsirg groups wh different risk levels and uptake of treatment, cludg key populatns such as men who have sex wh men.