| Literature DB >> 29589798 |
Kiffer G Card1, Heather L Armstrong2, Allison Carter1, Zishan Cui2, Lu Wang2, Julia Zhu2, Nathan J Lachowsky3, David M Moore4, Robert S Hogg1, Eric A Roth5.
Abstract
Assessments of gay and bisexual men's substance use often obscures salient sociocultural and identity-related experiences related to how they use drugs. Latent class analysis was used to examine how patterns of substance use represent the social, economic and identity-related experiences of this population. Participants were sexually active gay and bisexual men (including other men who have sex with men), aged ≥ 16 years, living in Metro Vancouver (n = 774). LCA indicators included all substances used in the past six months self-reported by more than 30 men. Model selection was made with consideration to model parsimony, interpretability and optimisation of statistical criteria. Multinomial regression identified factors associated with class membership. A six-class solution was identified representing: 'assorted drug use' (4.5%); 'club drug use' (9.5%); 'street drug use' (12.1%); 'sex drug use' (11.4%); 'conventional drug use' (i.e. tobacco, alcohol, marijuana; 25.9%); and 'limited drug use' (36.7%). Factors associated with class membership included age, sexual orientation, annual income, occupation, income from drug sales, housing stability, group sex event participation, gay bars/clubs attendance, sensation seeking and escape motivation. These results highlight the need for programmes and policies that seek to lessen social disparities and account for social distinctions among this population.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; Substance use; community; gay and bisexual men; latent class analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29589798 PMCID: PMC6162168 DOI: 10.1080/13691058.2018.1439186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cult Health Sex ISSN: 1369-1058