| Literature DB >> 29947563 |
Shan Qiao1, Guangyu Zhou1,2, Xiaoming Li1.
Abstract
To promote HIV-testing and offer optimal care for men who have sex with men (MSM), health-care providers (HCPs) must first be aware of their patients' sexual behaviors. Otherwise, HCPs may overlook MSM's risks for HIV infection and their special health-care needs. For MSM, reporting their same-sex behaviors to HCPs (disclosure to HCPs) may promote their linkage to HIV prevention and treatment cascade and improve their health outcomes. No literature review has been conducted to examine the relationship between disclosure to HCPs and uptake of HIV-testing among MSM. The current study reviewed and synthesized findings from 29 empirical studies published in English by 2016. We summarized the rates of MSM's disclosure to HCPs, investigated the association between disclosure and HIV-testing among MSM, identified potential facilitators and barriers for disclosure, and discussed the implications of our findings in research and clinical practices. The disclosure rates varied across subgroups and study settings, ranging from 16% to 90% with a median of 61%. Disclosure to HCPs was positively associated with uptake of HIV-testing. African American MSM were less likely to disclose to HCPs. MSM who lived in urban settings with higher education attainment and higher income were more likely to disclose. MSM tended to perceive younger or gay-friendly doctors as safer targets of disclosure. Clinics with LGBT-friendly signs were viewed as safer contexts for disclosure. Having previous communications about substance use, sex, and HIV with HCPs could also facilitate disclosure. The main reasons for nondisclosure included lack of probing from HCPs, concerns on confidentiality breach and stigma, and perceived irrelevance with services. Providing appropriate trainings for HCPs and creating gay-friendly clinical settings can be effective strategies to facilitate disclosures of same-sex behaviors among MSM and meet their specific medical needs. Interventions to promote disclosure should give priorities to MSM from the most marginalized subgroups (e.g., MSM in rural areas, MSM of ethnic minorities).Entities:
Keywords: HIV-testing; MSM; disclosure of same-sex behavior; disclosure to HCPs; literature review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29947563 PMCID: PMC6142161 DOI: 10.1177/1557988318784149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Mens Health ISSN: 1557-9883
Figure 1.PRISMA search flowchart for the reviewed studies.
Characteristics of Reviewed Studies.
| Author | Country | Year | Research design & data collection | Sample characteristics | HCPs type | Disclosure measure | Proportion | Association with HIV testing |
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| United States | 2014–2015 | Quantitative design; | 147 YBMSM (age: | Regular medical provider | Have you disclosed your sexual orientation to your medical provider? | 61.9% | N/R |
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| United States | 2004–2005 | Quantitative design; | 452 MSM | Health-care provider | Have you told any health-care providers that you are attracted to or have sex with other men? | 61.3% | HIV test in the past year: OR = 0.98, 95% CI [0.65, 1.48] |
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| United States | 2011 | Quantitative design; | 353 MSM | Health-care provider | Have you told your HCP that you are attracted to or have sex with men? | 49% | HIV test in past 12 months was associated with disclosure: aOR = 1.4, 95% CI [1.1, 1.7] |
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| United States | 2004–2005 | Quantitative design; | 198 GBM (age: | Health-care provider | Participants were asked to report the degree of disclosure of their sexual orientation to health-care providers using a scale from 1 (“out to none”) to 4 (“out to all”). | Out to health-care providers for gay men (90%) and for bisexual men (61%) | N/R |
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| UK | 1991–1992 | Survey with some open-ended questions | 677 gay men including 623 registered with GPs and 102 men (age: | General practitioner | Did your general practitioner know that you are homosexual? | Of these registered GPs, 56% said that their GPs knew their sexuality | N/R |
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| China | 2009 | Quantitative design; | 307 young migrant MSM (age: | Doctor | Participants were asked to identify all the individuals who knew about their same-sex behavior, including to doctors. | 24% | Never had HIV test among open to doctors (18%) |
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| United States | 2007–2008 | Quantitative design; | 608 Hispanic/Latino MSM (age: | Health-care provider | Did you disclose your sex with male to HCP? | 61.1% | Repeat/recent test: aOR = 1.97, 95% CI [1.30, 2.96]; Test avoiding (never testing or last test more than 5 years ago): aOR = 0.70 95% CI [0.46, 1.05] |
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| Germany | 2013–2014 | Quantitative design; | 1429 MSM (median age: 40 years old, range: 16–78) | Physician | openness regarding sexual orientation toward their physician | 55.3% | N/R |
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| United States | 2008 | Quantitative design; | 339 MSM (age: | Health-care provider | Have you ever disclosed same-sex attractions or male–male set to health-care providers? | 73% | HIV testing during previous 12 months: APR = 1.6, 95% CI [1.2, 2.0] |
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| New Zealand | 2014 | Quantitative design; | 3168 GBM | Usual general practitioner (GP, doctor) | Does your usual general practitioner (GP, doctor) know you are gay or bisexual or have sex with men? | 50.5% | Ever had an HIV test: aOR = 6.6, 95% CI [5.2, 8.3]; Recent HIV testing: aOR = 3.3, 95% CI [2.7, 3.9] |
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| United States | 2008 | Quantitative design; | 500 MSM | Health-care provider | Have you told any health-care providers that you are attracted to or have sex with other men? | 80% | N/R |
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| Germany | 2013–2014 | Quantitative design; | 15297 MSM | Primary health-care provider | Outness toward primary health-care provider about sexual orientation? | 40.0% | Recently test |
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| UK | 2011–2012 | Quantitative design; | 204 MSM | General practitioner | Whether your GP was aware of your sexual orientation? | 40% | N/R |
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| United States | N/R | Quantitative design; | 319 rural MSM (age: | Clinician | 7-point Liker-type, “My primary care provider definitely does not know that I am a gay” to “definitely know that I am gay and we talk about it openly” | Mean 5.7, 95% CI [4.7, 5.7], range from 1 to 7. Recoded into 81.4% | “HIV test in past 12 months and received a single HAV and HBV vaccines” coded as 1. Disclosure was associated with HIV test and HAV/HBV vaccination: aOR = 1.26, 95% CI [1.08, 1.47] |
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| Canada | 2008–2009 | Quantitative design; | 925 MSM (median age: 30 years old for no disclosure group and 32 years old for disclosure group) | Health-care professional | Have you told a health-care professional you have male sex partners? | 23% | Ever been tested for HIV: disclosed group 91% (646/714) |
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| United States | 2008 | Quantitative design; | 1734 Latino MSM (median age: 31 years old) Criteria: being male, >18 years old, U.S. resident, speaking English or Spanish, at least one sex partner during last year, had a negative or confirmed positive HIV test result, identified as Hispanic or Latino | Health-care provider | Have you ever told a health-care provider that you are attracted to or have sex with men? | 66% | HIV test in past 12 months: aPR = 1.3, 95% CI [1.2, 1.3] |
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| United States | 2011 | Quantitative design; | 722 GBM representing both men of 361 male couples (age: | Primary care provider | Does your primary care doctor know that you have sex with men? | 65.2% | N/R |
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| United States | 2007 | Quantitative design; | 271 MSM invited at a Gay Pride festival (age: | primary physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant | Do you believe your doctor knows your sexual orientation? | 71.4% | 59% for HIV testing among disclosure group |
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| United States | 2006 | Quantitative design; | 182 self-identified as gay or bisexual (age: | Regular doctor, nurse or health-care provider | Do you think your regular doctor, nurse or health-care provider knows your sexual orientation/gender identity? | 71% | N/R |
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| China | 2014 | Quantitative design; | 1424 MSM Criteria: >16 years old, born male, ever having sex with a man | Health professional | Have ever disclosed sexual orientation to health-care professionals? | 16% | The odds of disclosure were greater among MSM who had ever tested HIV aOR = 3.36, 95% CI [2.50, 4.51] |
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| United States | 2009 | Quantitative design; | 4620 MSM | Doctor, nurse, or health-care provider | When you visited a doctor, nurse, or health-care provider in the past 12 months, did you tell the HCP that you have sex with men? | 44.5 % | Being offered with HIV testing: OR = 19.22, 95% CI [15.79, 23.41] for Age 20 group; OR = 14.45, 95% CI [11.46, 18.21] for Age 30; OR = 10.86, 95% CI [7.06, 16.70] for Age 40; OR = 8.16, 95% CI [4.22, 15.77] for Age 50 |
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| United States | 2014 | Quantitative design; | 477 cisgender men (age: | Primary health-care provider | Outness to PCP (range 1–7) | 4.52 ( | Association between outness to PCP and health-care utilization: Regression coefficient = 0.119 ( |
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| United States | 2005 | Quantitative design; | 2577 MSM | Doctor or health professional | Talked with a doctor or health professional about having sex with men. | 62.1% | N/R |
| Author | Country | Conducted time | Design & data collection | Sample characteristics | Main findings | |||
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| New Zealand | N/R | Qualitative design via focus groups | 50 self-identified gay men | Disclosure was more likely to happen if gay men thought it was relevant to the issue they are seeing the doctor about. | |||
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| New Zealand | N/R | Qualitative design with focus groups | 45 gay men, age ranged from 24 to 64 years old | Perceptions of importance or necessary may influence gay men’s disclosure decision. Some nondisclosure participants did not think disclosure as an important or significant issue. A minority of participants viewed disclosure of gay identity to doctor as needed. | |||
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| UK | 2002–2003 | Qualitative design, based on semistructured interview with purposive sampling | 10 gay men aged between 60 and 70 years old | Fears of a lack of understanding, discrimination, or poorer treatment led some men to choose not to disclose their sexuality to health-care providers. This choice was not related to being open about sexuality more generally; some men who were usually very open being reluctant to talk openly to health workers. | |||
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| UK | 1991–1992 | Mixed methods; | 677 gay men including 623 registered with GPs and 102 men (age: | Men who viewed their GPs’ practice as unsympathetic toward homosexual men were less likely to have informed their general practitioner of their sexual orientation. | |||
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| United States | 2000–2001 | Qualitative design with focus group | 86 BMSM | Racial and sexual stigma toward BMSM impacts how open BMSM are with health providers about their sexuality. | |||
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| United States | 2002–2003 | Qualitative design semistructured interview with purposive sampling | 6 young BMSM (age: | Trusting relationship with health provider could facilitate communication on same-sexual behavior. | |||
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| United States | 2013–2014 | Qualitative design with one-on-one interview | 56 MSM (31 MSWs: median age = 27 years old, 25 MSM: median age = 39 years old) | MSM who did not report sex work described sex with men to clinicians more often. Medical barriers and perceived discrimination impede sexual behavior disclosure to clinicians. | |||
Note. HCP = health-care provider; N/R = not reported; M = mean, SD = standard deviation; YBMSM = young black men who have sex with men; HIV+ = HIV seropositive; HIV- = HIV seronegative; NHBS = National HIV Behavioral Surveillance System; GBM = gay and bisexual men; GP = general practitioner; PCP = primary care provider; HAV = hepatitis A virus; HBV = hepatitis B virus; MSW = men who engage in sex work; OR = odds ratios; aOR = adjusted odds ratios; aPR = adjusted proportion ratios.
Factors Influencing Disclosure of Same-Sex Behaviors to HCPs.
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| Race | Birth place | Age | Urban | Income | Edu | – | – | General openness | Perceived relevancy | Perceived risks | Gay/gay friendly doctors | Trusting relations with HCPs | Interactions with doctors | |
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| Y | Y | N | Y | N | Y | N | |||||||
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| Y | Y | ||||||||||||
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| N | N | Y | N | Y | N | Y | |||||||
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| Y | Y | ||||||||||||
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| N | Y | N | Y | N | Y | ||||||||
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| Y | N | Y | Y | ||||||||||
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| Y | Y | Y | Y | ||||||||||
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| Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | ||||||||
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| N | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | ||||||||
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| Y | Y | N | N | Y | |||||||||
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| Y | Y | ||||||||||||
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| Y | Y | Y | |||||||||||
Note. Y = investigated by researchers and found to be relevant to disclosure. N = investigated by researchers and found to be nonsignificant. HCPs = health-care providers; MSM = men who have sex with men.