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HIV leadership programming attendance is associated with PrEP and PEP awareness among young gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men in Vancouver, Canada

HIV leadership programming attendance is associated with PrEP and PEP awareness among young gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men in Vancouver, Canada
HIV leadership programming attendance is associated with PrEP and PEP awareness among young gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men in Vancouver, Canada

Background

Young gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (YGBM) may have reduced engagement and knowledge of HIV care and biomedical HIV prevention strategies, such as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP), and Treatment as Prevention (TasP), compared with adult GBM. We sought to understand differences in HIV prevention awareness, health care access, and service utilization between youth (16–29 years) and adult (≥30 year) GBM, as well as factors associated with attendance in HIV leadership programming among YGBM living in the publicly funded PrEP setting of Vancouver, Canada.
Methods

Sexually-active GBM were recruited using respondent-driven sampling (RDS) from February 2012 to February 2015. Participants completed an in-person computer-assisted self-interview every 6 months, up to February 2017, with questions on sociodemographic factors, awareness of biomedical HIV prevention strategies, and an HIV treatment optimism-skepticism scale. Participants were asked if they had ever attended either of two HIV-leadership programs designed for YGBM. Both programs involve multiple GBM-led education and social networking sessions operated by community-based organizations in Vancouver. Multivariable Glimmix confounder models assessed differences between youth and adult GBM. Among younger men, bivariate analyses examined factors associated with HIV-leadership program attendance.
Results

Of 698 GBM who enrolled in the longitudinal study, 36.8% were less than 30 years old at the first study visit. After controlling for gender identification, sexual orientation, HIV status, and income in the past 6 months, younger GBM (n = 257/698) had lower awareness of biomedical HIV prevention strategies and less HIV treatment optimism compared with older GBM (n = 441/698). Among younger GBM who attended HIV-leadership programs (n = 50), greater awareness of biomedical HIV prevention strategies and higher HIV treatment optimism were reported, compared with non-attendees.
Conclusion

Younger GBM, who are disproportionately affected by the HIV epidemic, are less aware of new prevention technologies than older GBM, but attending peer-based HIV-leadership programs ameliorates age-disparities in HIV-prevention knowledge and treatment optimism.
1471-2458
1-11
Closson, Kalysha
eb727a29-77de-4fa9-a4fe-5d75e1361cc4
Chown, Sarah A.
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Armstrong, Heather L.
3dc9c223-1a61-47ad-ab0b-50d06cddf4f2
Wang, Lu
1aaf7ac6-9013-4a66-b5a6-15c50637d5d3
Bacani, Nicanor
87b35d3e-a58f-4cb5-bcc9-05afc090b95e
Ho, Darren
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Jollimore, Jody
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Olarewaju, Gbolahan
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Moore, David
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Hogg, Robert S.
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Lachowsky, Nathan J.
87634bac-759c-4e7b-9f16-22fb37e87cf6
Closson, Kalysha
eb727a29-77de-4fa9-a4fe-5d75e1361cc4
Chown, Sarah A.
c6789199-94f8-4275-b20c-6bf2c24edd07
Armstrong, Heather L.
3dc9c223-1a61-47ad-ab0b-50d06cddf4f2
Wang, Lu
1aaf7ac6-9013-4a66-b5a6-15c50637d5d3
Bacani, Nicanor
87b35d3e-a58f-4cb5-bcc9-05afc090b95e
Ho, Darren
0ad461e7-dd5a-49ca-8189-817799d177c8
Jollimore, Jody
61140450-bdfb-421f-96f5-5a62f7833332
Olarewaju, Gbolahan
2c3cfb4b-af61-480f-8cd2-84b981cb0b33
Moore, David
3b5e246f-616d-4a9d-9f14-3e33911a8358
Hogg, Robert S.
b9a2e2ba-5c36-4b21-b5f3-23f5fd7ad52a
Lachowsky, Nathan J.
87634bac-759c-4e7b-9f16-22fb37e87cf6

Closson, Kalysha, Chown, Sarah A., Armstrong, Heather L., Wang, Lu, Bacani, Nicanor, Ho, Darren, Jollimore, Jody, Olarewaju, Gbolahan, Moore, David, Hogg, Robert S. and Lachowsky, Nathan J. (2019) HIV leadership programming attendance is associated with PrEP and PEP awareness among young gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men in Vancouver, Canada. BMC Public Health, 19 (429), 1-11, [429]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-019-6744-y).

Record type: Article

Abstract


Background

Young gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (YGBM) may have reduced engagement and knowledge of HIV care and biomedical HIV prevention strategies, such as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP), and Treatment as Prevention (TasP), compared with adult GBM. We sought to understand differences in HIV prevention awareness, health care access, and service utilization between youth (16–29 years) and adult (≥30 year) GBM, as well as factors associated with attendance in HIV leadership programming among YGBM living in the publicly funded PrEP setting of Vancouver, Canada.
Methods

Sexually-active GBM were recruited using respondent-driven sampling (RDS) from February 2012 to February 2015. Participants completed an in-person computer-assisted self-interview every 6 months, up to February 2017, with questions on sociodemographic factors, awareness of biomedical HIV prevention strategies, and an HIV treatment optimism-skepticism scale. Participants were asked if they had ever attended either of two HIV-leadership programs designed for YGBM. Both programs involve multiple GBM-led education and social networking sessions operated by community-based organizations in Vancouver. Multivariable Glimmix confounder models assessed differences between youth and adult GBM. Among younger men, bivariate analyses examined factors associated with HIV-leadership program attendance.
Results

Of 698 GBM who enrolled in the longitudinal study, 36.8% were less than 30 years old at the first study visit. After controlling for gender identification, sexual orientation, HIV status, and income in the past 6 months, younger GBM (n = 257/698) had lower awareness of biomedical HIV prevention strategies and less HIV treatment optimism compared with older GBM (n = 441/698). Among younger GBM who attended HIV-leadership programs (n = 50), greater awareness of biomedical HIV prevention strategies and higher HIV treatment optimism were reported, compared with non-attendees.
Conclusion

Younger GBM, who are disproportionately affected by the HIV epidemic, are less aware of new prevention technologies than older GBM, but attending peer-based HIV-leadership programs ameliorates age-disparities in HIV-prevention knowledge and treatment optimism.

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 April 2019
Published date: 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 430654
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430654
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: ea41dcfc-1626-42a9-aa70-922dc85f2c34
ORCID for Heather L. Armstrong: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1071-8644

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Date deposited: 07 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:40

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Contributors

Author: Kalysha Closson
Author: Sarah A. Chown
Author: Lu Wang
Author: Nicanor Bacani
Author: Darren Ho
Author: Jody Jollimore
Author: Gbolahan Olarewaju
Author: David Moore
Author: Robert S. Hogg
Author: Nathan J. Lachowsky

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