Publication | Closed Access
How Drug using men who have sex with men account for substance use during Sexual Behaviours: Questioning assumptions of Hiv Prevention and Research
37
Citations
24
References
2004
Year
Substance UseHiv PreventionSocial SciencesSexual CommunicationContraceptionRisky Sex PracticesGender StudiesAddiction MedicineSexual AddictionPublic HealthSexual And Reproductive HealthHealth SciencesPregnancy PreventionBehavioral SciencesHealth PolicyCommercial SexSexual Well-beingSexual ResponsibilityHivSexual BehavioursSexual BehaviorSexual HealthSubstance AbuseTreatment And PreventionAddictionDu-msm DescriptionsSubstance AddictionSexual OrientationActive Du-msm
AbstractMuch HIV prevention research ignores the underlying reasons why drug-using men who have sex with men (DU-MSM) use substances during sex. The present study explores DU-MSM descriptions of the relationships among substance use, sex, and risky sex practices. Twenty-seven in-depth qualitative interviews were conducted with sexually active DU-MSM. The research findings illustrate six roles of substances within the sexual lives of DU-MSM: Enhancing the sexual experience, increasing sexual arousal, facilitating sexual encounters, increasing the capacity for sexual behaviours, prolonging sexual experiences, and increasing the capacity to "turn a trick." While acknowledging experiences of substance use leading to risky sex practices, participants expressed scepticism of any reductive causal relationship. The findings question recurrent assumptions that underpin HIV prevention initiatives and redirect research efforts in ways that may better inform HIV prevention.KeywordsMen who have sex with menSubstance useRisky sex practice
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1