Literature DB >> 24160715

Practices of receptive and insertive anal sex among transgender women in relation to partner types, sociocultural factors, and background variables.

Tooru Nemoto1, Birte Bödeker, Mariko Iwamoto, Maria Sakata.   

Abstract

It is urgent to develop efficacious HIV prevention programs to curb the reported extremely high HIV prevalence and incidence among transgender women (male-to-female transgender persons) who reside in large cities in the USA. This study aimed to describe unprotected receptive anal sex (URAS) and unprotected insertive anal sex (UIAS) among high-risk transgender women in relation to partner types, psychosocial factors, and background variables. Based on purposive sampling from the targeted communities and AIDS service organizations in San Francisco and Oakland, a total of 573 transgender women who had a history of sex work were recruited and individually interviewed using a structured survey questionnaire. Significant correlates with URAS with primary, casual, and commercial sex partners were found (e.g., needs for social support, frequency of social support received, exposure to transphobia, self-esteem, economic pressure, norms toward practicing healthy behaviors, and self-efficacy toward practicing safe sex). Multiple logistic regression analyses revealed that transgender women who had engaged in URAS with commercial partners were more likely to have higher levels of transphobia or lower levels of the norms or self-efficacy to practice safe sex. Among the participants who did not have vaginoplasty (preoperative transgender women), 16.4% had engaged in insertive anal sex (IAS) with commercial partners in the past 30 days. The participants who were HIV positive and had engaged in IAS were more likely to be African-American or Caucasians, coinfected with sexually transmitted infections, or identified themselves as homosexual. Practices of IAS among transgender women have not been thoroughly investigated in relation to sexual and gender identity. UIAS with homosexual and bisexual men in addition to URAS may be a cause for high HIV incidence among transgender women. An HIV prevention intervention study must be developed and evaluated, which aims to reduce HIV-positive and -negative transgender women's URAS and UIAS.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24160715     DOI: 10.1080/09540121.2013.841832

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Care        ISSN: 0954-0121


  35 in total

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4.  Sociocultural Contexts of Access to HIV Primary Care and Participant Experience with an Intervention Project: African American Transgender Women Living with HIV in Alameda County, California.

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6.  Characteristics of Transgender Residents of Massachusetts Cities With High HIV Prevalence.

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7.  Does Stigma Toward Anal Sexuality Impede HIV Prevention Among Men Who Have Sex With Men in the United States? A Structural Equation Modeling Assessment.

Authors:  Bryan A Kutner; Jane M Simoni; Kevin M King; Steven M Goodreau; Andrea Norcini Pala; Emma Creegan; Frances M Aunon; Stefan D Baral; B R Simon Rosser
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8.  Unevenness in Health at the Intersection of Gender and Sexuality: Sexual Minority Disparities in Alcohol and Drug Use Among Transwomen in the San Francisco Bay Area.

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9.  Using a two-step method to measure transgender identity in Latin America/the Caribbean, Portugal, and Spain.

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Review 10.  HIV risk and preventive interventions in transgender women sex workers.

Authors:  Tonia Poteat; Andrea L Wirtz; Anita Radix; Annick Borquez; Alfonso Silva-Santisteban; Madeline B Deutsch; Sharful Islam Khan; Sam Winter; Don Operario
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