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Did mpox knowledge, attitudes and beliefs affect intended behaviour in the general population and men who are gay, bisexual and who have sex with men? An online cross-sectional survey in the UK

Did mpox knowledge, attitudes and beliefs affect intended behaviour in the general population and men who are gay, bisexual and who have sex with men? An online cross-sectional survey in the UK
Did mpox knowledge, attitudes and beliefs affect intended behaviour in the general population and men who are gay, bisexual and who have sex with men? An online cross-sectional survey in the UK
Objectives: to investigate rates of mpox beliefs, knowledge and intended behaviours in the general population and in gay, bisexual or other men who have sex with men (GBMSM), and factors associated with intended behaviours. To test the impact of motivational messages (vs a factual control) on intended behaviours.

Design: cross-sectional online survey including a nested randomised controlled trial.

Setting: data collected from 5 September 2022 to 6 October 2022.

Participants: participants were aged 18 years or over and lived in the UK (general population). In addition, GBMSM were male, and gay, bisexual or had sex with men. The general population sample was recruited through a market research company. GBMSM were recruited through a market research company, the dating app Grindr and targeted adverts on Meta (Facebook and Instagram).

Main outcome measures: intention to self-isolate, seek medical help, stop all sexual contact, share details of recent sexual contacts and accept vaccination.

Results: sociodemographic characteristics differed by sample. There was no effect of very brief motivational messaging on behavioural intentions. Respondents from Grindr and Meta were more likely to intend to seek help immediately, completely stop sexual behaviour and be vaccinated or intend to be vaccinated, but being less likely to intend to self-isolate (ps<0.001). In the general population sample, intending to carry out protective behaviours was generally associated with being female, older, having less financial hardship, greater worry, higher perceived risk to others and higher perceived susceptibility to and severity of mpox (ps<0.001). There were fewer associations with behaviours in the Grindr sample, possibly due to reduced power.

Conclusions: GBMSM were more likely to intend to enact protective behaviours, except for self-isolation. This may reflect targeted public health efforts and engagement with this group. Associations with socioeconomic factors suggest that providing financial support may encourage people to engage with protective behaviours.
public health, sexual medicine
2044-6055
Smith, Louise E.
4cfb9721-9982-4c96-b170-db664248117b
Potts, Henry W.W.
63a08a68-c25a-40af-8ac4-6ffc36052004
Brainard, Julii
b0511246-7553-4ade-a662-f0ccea0fb12d
May, Tom
cd2be739-756f-492e-9ff2-1d52a94a4133
Oliver, Isabel
8cd29c59-d46a-4b7f-97ee-ad66a48cf0ff
Amlot, Richard
b327f983-3414-49c2-aa93-c6e78f3b7bdf
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Rubin, G.J.
4776cfa7-0040-48af-8b8d-f644ae7c27ec
Smith, Louise E.
4cfb9721-9982-4c96-b170-db664248117b
Potts, Henry W.W.
63a08a68-c25a-40af-8ac4-6ffc36052004
Brainard, Julii
b0511246-7553-4ade-a662-f0ccea0fb12d
May, Tom
cd2be739-756f-492e-9ff2-1d52a94a4133
Oliver, Isabel
8cd29c59-d46a-4b7f-97ee-ad66a48cf0ff
Amlot, Richard
b327f983-3414-49c2-aa93-c6e78f3b7bdf
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Rubin, G.J.
4776cfa7-0040-48af-8b8d-f644ae7c27ec

Smith, Louise E., Potts, Henry W.W., Brainard, Julii, May, Tom, Oliver, Isabel, Amlot, Richard, Yardley, Lucy and Rubin, G.J. (2023) Did mpox knowledge, attitudes and beliefs affect intended behaviour in the general population and men who are gay, bisexual and who have sex with men? An online cross-sectional survey in the UK. BMJ Open, 13 (10), [e070882]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2022-070882).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: to investigate rates of mpox beliefs, knowledge and intended behaviours in the general population and in gay, bisexual or other men who have sex with men (GBMSM), and factors associated with intended behaviours. To test the impact of motivational messages (vs a factual control) on intended behaviours.

Design: cross-sectional online survey including a nested randomised controlled trial.

Setting: data collected from 5 September 2022 to 6 October 2022.

Participants: participants were aged 18 years or over and lived in the UK (general population). In addition, GBMSM were male, and gay, bisexual or had sex with men. The general population sample was recruited through a market research company. GBMSM were recruited through a market research company, the dating app Grindr and targeted adverts on Meta (Facebook and Instagram).

Main outcome measures: intention to self-isolate, seek medical help, stop all sexual contact, share details of recent sexual contacts and accept vaccination.

Results: sociodemographic characteristics differed by sample. There was no effect of very brief motivational messaging on behavioural intentions. Respondents from Grindr and Meta were more likely to intend to seek help immediately, completely stop sexual behaviour and be vaccinated or intend to be vaccinated, but being less likely to intend to self-isolate (ps<0.001). In the general population sample, intending to carry out protective behaviours was generally associated with being female, older, having less financial hardship, greater worry, higher perceived risk to others and higher perceived susceptibility to and severity of mpox (ps<0.001). There were fewer associations with behaviours in the Grindr sample, possibly due to reduced power.

Conclusions: GBMSM were more likely to intend to enact protective behaviours, except for self-isolation. This may reflect targeted public health efforts and engagement with this group. Associations with socioeconomic factors suggest that providing financial support may encourage people to engage with protective behaviours.

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SMITH 2023 BMJ OPEN Mpox e070882.full - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 21 September 2023
Published date: 12 October 2023
Keywords: public health, sexual medicine

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490309
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490309
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: f0d09eb5-642c-4046-86b8-4c74a1aa9cc9
ORCID for Lucy Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

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Date deposited: 23 May 2024 16:44
Last modified: 25 May 2024 01:36

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Contributors

Author: Louise E. Smith
Author: Henry W.W. Potts
Author: Julii Brainard
Author: Tom May
Author: Isabel Oliver
Author: Richard Amlot
Author: Lucy Yardley ORCID iD
Author: G.J. Rubin

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