Longitudinal event-level analysis of gay and bisexual men’s anal sex versatility: behavior, roles, and substance use
Longitudinal event-level analysis of gay and bisexual men’s anal sex versatility: behavior, roles, and substance use
Gay and bisexual Men Who Have Sex with Men (GBM) are sexually unique in that they can practice penile-anal sex versatility, i.e. engage in insertive and receptive anal sex. Individual-level versatility is extensively researched both as a sexual behavior linked to HIV/STI transmission, and as a GBM identity that can change over time. However, there is a dearth of research on event-level versatility (ELV), defined as taking the receptive and insertive role in the same sexual encounter. We analyzed event-level data from 644 GBM in the Momentum Health Study from February 2012-February 2017 to identify factors associated with ELV prevalence, the relationship between ELV and anal sex role preference, and sero-adaptive and sexualized drug use strategies. Univariate analysis revealed ELV prevalence rates between 15% and 20%. A multivariate generalized linear mixed model indicated ELV significantly (p < .05) associated with versatile role preference and condomless sex. However, the majority of ELV came from GBM reporting insertive or receptive role preferences, and there was significantly higher condom use among sero-discordant partners, indicating sero-adaptation. Multi- variate log-linear modeling identified multiple polysubstance combinations significantly associated with ELV. Results provide insights into GBM sexual behavior and constitute empirical data useful for future HIV/STI transmission pattern modeling.
1136-1146
Shaw, Lindsay
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Wang, Lu
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Cui, Zishan
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Rich, Ashleigh J.
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Armstrong, Heather
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Lachowsky, Nathan J.
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Sereda, Paul
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Card, Kiffer G.
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Olarewaju, Gbolahan
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Moore, David M.
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Hogg, Robert S.
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Roth, Eric Abella
4ae36281-aeee-4433-a54c-4ea56db161c9
2019
Shaw, Lindsay
437c158b-8881-4384-825d-812fb0cc37a3
Wang, Lu
22f5289e-46aa-418f-bdf7-95b76c40d4ee
Cui, Zishan
298721d1-0246-4602-9120-c626eec8b142
Rich, Ashleigh J.
d3fc1866-fa13-4200-a2e2-da76678e89a6
Armstrong, Heather
3dc9c223-1a61-47ad-ab0b-50d06cddf4f2
Lachowsky, Nathan J.
87634bac-759c-4e7b-9f16-22fb37e87cf6
Sereda, Paul
7b1e0f3a-2477-4bc7-9f65-910dee84a320
Card, Kiffer G.
4bece098-5a9b-46cf-a64e-615f14acce73
Olarewaju, Gbolahan
2c3cfb4b-af61-480f-8cd2-84b981cb0b33
Moore, David M.
b3bb7f8f-4409-412e-959b-bcda959a8d2d
Hogg, Robert S.
3f71ad69-9c8a-4732-bb86-4aa0652e1f3f
Roth, Eric Abella
4ae36281-aeee-4433-a54c-4ea56db161c9
Shaw, Lindsay, Wang, Lu, Cui, Zishan, Rich, Ashleigh J., Armstrong, Heather, Lachowsky, Nathan J., Sereda, Paul, Card, Kiffer G., Olarewaju, Gbolahan, Moore, David M., Hogg, Robert S. and Roth, Eric Abella
(2019)
Longitudinal event-level analysis of gay and bisexual men’s anal sex versatility: behavior, roles, and substance use.
Journal of Sex Research, 56 (9), .
(doi:10.1080/00224499.2019.1652238).
Abstract
Gay and bisexual Men Who Have Sex with Men (GBM) are sexually unique in that they can practice penile-anal sex versatility, i.e. engage in insertive and receptive anal sex. Individual-level versatility is extensively researched both as a sexual behavior linked to HIV/STI transmission, and as a GBM identity that can change over time. However, there is a dearth of research on event-level versatility (ELV), defined as taking the receptive and insertive role in the same sexual encounter. We analyzed event-level data from 644 GBM in the Momentum Health Study from February 2012-February 2017 to identify factors associated with ELV prevalence, the relationship between ELV and anal sex role preference, and sero-adaptive and sexualized drug use strategies. Univariate analysis revealed ELV prevalence rates between 15% and 20%. A multivariate generalized linear mixed model indicated ELV significantly (p < .05) associated with versatile role preference and condomless sex. However, the majority of ELV came from GBM reporting insertive or receptive role preferences, and there was significantly higher condom use among sero-discordant partners, indicating sero-adaptation. Multi- variate log-linear modeling identified multiple polysubstance combinations significantly associated with ELV. Results provide insights into GBM sexual behavior and constitute empirical data useful for future HIV/STI transmission pattern modeling.
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REVISED VERSATILITY EVENT LEVEL JULY 15 2019
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SHAW ET AL. ON LINE VERSATILITY
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e-pub ahead of print date: 28 August 2019
Published date: 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 434433
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/434433
ISSN: 0022-4499
PURE UUID: a864bec9-caae-48ef-80ff-4cb8a5e5a5cf
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Date deposited: 23 Sep 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 08:12
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Author:
Lindsay Shaw
Author:
Lu Wang
Author:
Zishan Cui
Author:
Ashleigh J. Rich
Author:
Nathan J. Lachowsky
Author:
Paul Sereda
Author:
Kiffer G. Card
Author:
Gbolahan Olarewaju
Author:
David M. Moore
Author:
Robert S. Hogg
Author:
Eric Abella Roth
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