| Literature DB >> 30600454 |
Carmen H Logie1,2, Ying Wang3, Natania Marcus4, Kandasi Levermore5, Nicolette Jones5, Tyrone Ellis5, Nicolette Bryan6.
Abstract
Syndemics approaches explore the convergence of psychosocial factors that elevate HIV vulnerabilities. Less research has explored syndemics among lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) persons in contexts where criminalization has downstream impacts on LGBT discrimination, such as Jamaica. We implemented a cross-sectional survey with LGBT persons (n = 911) in Jamaica. We conducted structural equation modeling to examine direct and indirect effects of a latent syndemics construct (binge drinking, depressive symptoms, childhood/adult abuse) on HIV vulnerabilities (lifetime sex partners, perceived HIV risk, condom self-efficacy) and the mediating role of protective factors (social support, resilient coping). Direct paths from syndemics to lifetime sex partners, perceived HIV risk, and condom self-efficacy were significant. Resilient coping and social support partially mediated the association between syndemics and condom use self-efficacy. Resilient coping partially mediated the relationship between syndemics and lifetime sex partners. Interventions can target syndemic issues to reduce HIV vulnerabilities among Jamaican LGBT persons.Entities:
Keywords: HIV risk; Jamaica; LGBT; Resilience; Social support; Syndemics
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30600454 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-018-2377-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165