| Literature DB >> 31023281 |
Ada R Miltz1, Fiona C Lampe2, Loraine J Bacchus3, Sheena McCormack4, David Dunn4, Ellen White4, Alison Rodger2, Andrew N Phillips2, Lorraine Sherr2, Amanda Clarke5, Alan McOwan6, Ann Sullivan7, Mitzy Gafos3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the prevalence and correlates of intimate partner violence (IPV) among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM) in the UK. The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of IPV, associations of socio-economic and psychosocial factors with IPV, and the association of IPV with depression and sexual behaviour, among GBMSM in the PROUD trial of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).Entities:
Keywords: Depression; HIV; Intimate partner violence (IPV); Men who have sex with men (MSM); Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP); STI; Sexual risk behaviour
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31023281 PMCID: PMC6482482 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6757-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Prevalence of IPV victimization and perpetration at month-12 (N = 410)
Fig. 2Prevalence of IPV victimization and perpetration at month-24 (N = 333)
Adjusted associations with lifetime IPV victimization and IPV victimization in the last year, using pooled 12/24-month data
| Lifetime IPV victimization | IPV victimization in the last year | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (n/N) | Adjusteda PR [95% CI] | % (n/N) | Adjusteda PR [95% CI] | ||
| Study time-point | Month-12 | 44.9% (184/410) | 1 | 15.6% (64/410) | 1 |
| Month-24 | 40.2% (134/333) | 0.92 [0.76, 1.10] | 14.7% (49/333) | 0.98 [0.69, 1.40] | |
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| Randomized to study trial arm | Immediate | 42.0% (167/398) | 1 | 15.8% (63/398) | 1 |
| Deferred | 43.8% (151/345) | 1.05 [0.82, 1.35] | 14.5% (50/345) | 0.89 [0.60, 1.32] | |
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| London study clinic site | Yes | 40.6% (210/517) | 1 | 14.3% (74/517) | 1 |
| No | 47.8% (108/226) | 1.18 [0.89, 1.56] | 17.3% (39/226) | 1.31 [0.85, 2.02] | |
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| Age | < 25 | 55.3% (21/38) | 1.27 [0.75, 2.15] | 23.7% (9/38) | 1.61 [0.73, 3.59] |
| 25–29 | 48.4% (44/91) | 1.19 [0.80, 1.77] | 19.8% (18/91) | 1.32 [0.71, 2.44] | |
| 30–34 | 39.4% (63/160) | 0.94 [0.65, 1.36] | 13.1% (21/160) | 0.83 [0.45, 1.51] | |
| 35–39 | 47.2% (68/144) | 1.10 [0.76, 1.59] | 16.0% (23/144) | 1.02 [0.57, 1.84] | |
| 40–44 | 35.0% (44/125) | 0.86 [0.58, 1.28] | 11.2% (14/125) | 0.74 [0.38, 1.44] | |
| 45+ | 42.2% (78/185) | 1 | 15.1% (28/185) | 1 | |
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| Born in the UK and ethnicity (BAME = Black, Asian, and minority ethnic) | Yes, white | 45.0% (183/407) | 1 | 14.3% (58/407) | 1 |
| Yes, BAME | 51.3% (20/39) | 1.18 [0.70, 1.99] | 20.5% (8/39) | 1.40 [0.63, 3.10] | |
| No, white | 39.1% (79/202) | 0.90 [0.66, 1.23] | 12.9% (26/202) | 0.97 [0.58, 1.62] | |
| No, BAME | 37.6% (35/93) | 0.84 [0.54, 1.31] | 22.6% (21/93) | 1.83 [1.04, 3.20] | |
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| Self-reported sexual identity | Gay | 43.1% (303/703) | 1 | 15.2% (107/703) | 1 |
| Bisexual/ straightd | 29.4% (10/34) | 0.62 [0.29, 1.30] | 14.7% (5/34) | 0.84 [0.32, 2.22] | |
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| University Education | Yes | 42.0% (193/460) | 1 | 15.7% (72/460) | 1 |
| No/missing | 44.2% (125/283) | 1.01 [0.77, 1.32] | 14.5% (41/283) | 0.84 [0.55, 1.29] | |
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| Employed | Yes | 41.3% (251/608) | 1 | 14.5% (88/608) | 1 |
| No/missing | 49.6% (67/135) | 1.17 [0.85, 1.62] | 18.5% (25/135) | 1.17 [0.70, 1.94] | |
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| Had sex after using recreational drugs (past three months) | No/missing | 38.1% (137/360) | 1 | 10.8% (39/360) | 1 |
| Yes | 47.3% (181/383) | 1.36 [1.08, 1.71] | 19.3% (74/383) | 1.92 [1.28, 2.90] | |
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| Group sex (past three months) | No/missing | 42.1% (150/356) | 1 | 11.0% (39/356) | 1 |
| Yes | 43.4% (168/387) | 1.10 [0.88, 1.38] | 19.1% (74/387) | 1.87 [1.25, 2.79] | |
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| Age < 13 years at anal sex debut | No | 43.7% (295/675) | 1 | 15.3% (103/675) | 1 |
| Yes | 53.7% (22/41) | 1.15 [0.72, 1.84] | 22.0% (9/41) | 1.49 [0.74, 3.03] | |
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| Age ≤ 15 years at anal sex debut | No | 42.3% (236/558) | 1 | 14.7% (82/558) | 1 |
| Yes | 51.3% (81/158) | 1.18 [0.89, 1.56] | 19.0% (30/158) | 1.33 [0.85, 2.08] | |
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| Negative attitudes towards gay sexuality | No/missing | 38.3% (166/434) | 1 | 10.8% (47/434) | 1 |
| Yes | 49.2% (152/309) | 1.31 [1.05, 1.64] | 21.4% (66/309) | 2.00 [1.36, 2.94] | |
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| ‘Out’ to all/almost all friends, work mates, and close family | Yes | 44.6% (166/372) | 1 | 14.0% (52/372) | 1 |
| No | 42.3% (150/355) | 1.08 [0.86, 1.36] | 17.2% (61/355) | 1.25 [0.85, 1.85] | |
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| Lifetime IPV perpetration | No/missing | 32.0% (193/603) | 1 | 8.8% (53/603) | 1 |
| Yes | 89.3% (125/140) | 2.69 [2.11, 3.42] | 42.9% (60/140) | 4.72 [3.22, 6.93] | |
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aAge (< 25, 25–29, 30–39, 40+), born in the UK, sexual identity (gay or bisexual/straight), university education, and London study clinic site
bTest for trend
cp value by Wald test using GEEs. p values< 0.1 are indicated in bold
dFive men identified as straight (1.2%)
Adjusted associations with lifetime IPV perpetration and IPV perpetration in the last year, using pooled 12/24-month data
| Lifetime IPV perpetration | IPV perpetration in the last year | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (n/N) | Adjusteda PR [95% CI] | % (n/N) | Adjusteda PR [95% CI] | ||
| Study time-point | Month-12 | 19.5% (80/410) | 1 | 7.8% (32/410) | 1 |
| Month-24 | 18.0% (60/333) | 0.98 [0.76, 1.25] | 6.9% (23/333) | 0.99 [0.58, 1.68] | |
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| Randomized to study trial arm | Immediate | 19.9% (79/398) | 1 | 7.8% (31/398) | 1 |
| Deferred | 17.7% (61/345) | 0.89 [0.60, 1.32] | 7.0% (24/345) | 0.81 [0.46, 1.41] | |
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| London study clinic site | Yes | 18.4% (95/517) | 1 | 7.9% (41/517) | 1 |
| No | 19.9% (45/226) | 1.01 [0.65, 1.57] | 6.2% (14/226) | 0.71 [0.37, 1.35] | |
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| Age | < 25 | 34.2% (13/38) | 2.12 [1.04, 4.30] | 18.4% (7/38) | 5.53 [1.80, 17.0] |
| 25–29 | 31.9% (29/91) | 1.79 [1.00, 3.20] | 19.8% (18/91) | 5.89 [2.30, 15.10] | |
| 30–34 | 15.0% (24/160) | 0.92 [0.50, 1.70] | 5.6% (9/160) | 1.73 [0.60, 4.97] | |
| 35–39 | 18.8% (27/144) | 1.25 [0.69, 2.24] | 7.6% (11/144) | 2.26 [0.81, 6.28] | |
| 40–44 | 16.0% (20/125) | 0.98 [0.53, 1.82] | 3.2% (4/125) | 0.98 [0.27, 3.57] | |
| 45+ | 14.6% (27/185) | 1 | 3.2% (6/185) | 1 | |
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| Born in the UK and white ethnicity (BAME = Black, Asian, and minority ethnic) | Yes, white | 19.2% (78/407) | 1 | 7.1% (29/407) | 1 |
| Yes, BAME | 25.6% (10/39) | 1.06 [0.48, 2.35] | 12.8% (5/39) | 1.10 [0.40, 3.05] | |
| No, white | 17.8% (36/202) | 1.05 [0.65, 1.70] | 6.4% (13/202) | 0.97 [0.48, 1.95] | |
| No, BAME | 17.2% (16/93) | 0.92 [0.47, 1.78] | 8.6% (8/93) | 1.13 [0.49, 2.61] | |
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| Self-reported sexual identity | Gay | 18.9% (133/703) | 1 | 7.4% (52/703) | 1 |
| Bisexual/straightd | 17.7% (6/34) | 0.79 [0.30, 2.08] | 8.8% (3/34) | 0.91 [0.27, 3.04] | |
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| University Education | Yes | 23.0% (65/283) | 1 | 9.2% (26/283) | 1 |
| No/missing | 16.3% (75/460) | 1.31 [0.87, 1.96] | 6.3% (29/460) | 1.28 [0.73, 2.25] | |
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| Employed | Yes | 19.4% (118/608) | 1 | 7.7% (47/608) | 1 |
| No/missing | 16.3% (22/135) | 0.68 [0.39, 1.20] | 5.9% (8/135) | 0.60 [2.67, 1.34] | |
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| Had sex after using recreational drugs (past three months) | No/missing | 12.5% (45/360) | 1 | 4.2% (15/360) | 1 |
| Yes | 24.8% (95/383) | 1.75 [1.23, 2.50] | 10.4% (40/383) | 2.16 [1.17, 3.96] | |
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| Group sex (past three months) | No/missing | 15.7% (56/356) | 1 | 6.5% (23/356) | 1 |
| Yes | 21.7% (84/387) | 1.38 [1.00, 1.91] | 8.3% (32/387) | 1.42 [0.82, 2.46] | |
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| Age < 13 years at anal sex debut | No | 19.6% (132/675) | 1 | 7.6% (51/675) | 1 |
| Yes | 17.0% (7/41) | 1.01 [0.48, 2.13] | 7.3% (3/41) | 1.06 [0.33, 3.44] | |
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| Age ≤ 15 years at anal sex debut | No | 18.1% (101/558) | 1 | 7.2% (40/558) | 1 |
| Yes | 24.1% (38/158) | 1.32 [0.88, 1.99] | 8.9% (14/158) | 0.93 [0.48, 1.77] | |
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| Negative views about gay sexuality | No/missing | 16.8% (73/434) | 1 | 5.1% (22/434) | 1 |
| Yes | 21.7% (67/309) | 1.33 [0.97, 1.83] | 10.7% (33/309) | 2.10 [1.21, 3.65] | |
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| ‘Out’ to all/almost all friends, work mates, and close family | Yes | 22.6% (84/372) | 1 | 8.1% (30/372) | 1 |
| No | 15.8% (56/355) | 0.79 [0.56, 1.12] | 7.0% (25/355) | 0.93 [0.53, 1.62] | |
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| Any IPV victimization | No/missing | 3.5% (15/425) | 1 | 1.2% (5/425) | 1 |
| Yes | 39.3% (125/318) | 8.47 [5.09, 14.09] | 15.7% (50/318) | 13.54 [5.33, 34.38] | |
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aAge (included as four categories: < 25, 25–29, 30–39, 40+), born in the UK, sexual identity (gay or bisexual/straight), university education, and London clinic site
bTest for trend
cp value by Wald test using GEEs. p values< 0.1 are indicated in bold
dFive men identified as straight (1.2%)
Unadjusted and adjusted associations of IPV measures with depressive symptoms
| Clinically significant depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 ≥ 10) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (n/N) | Unadjusted PR [95% CI] | Adjusteda PR [95% CI] | ||
| Lifetime IPV victimization | No/missing | 8.9% (38/425) | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 21.7% (69/318) | 2.45 [1.63, 3.67] | 2.57 [1.71, 3.86] | |
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| IPV victimization in last year | No/missing | 11.1% (70/630) | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 32.7% (37/113) | 2.82 [1.88, 4.22] | 2.93 [1.96, 4.40] | |
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| Lifetime IPV perpetration | No/missing | 10.8% (65/603) | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 30.0% (42/140) | 2.83 [1.89, 4.22] | 2.87 [1.91, 4.32] | |
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| IPV perpetration in last year | No/missing | 12.1% (83/688) | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 43.6% (24/55) | 3.40 [2.13, 5.41] | 3.47 [2.13, 5.64] | |
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| Combined lifetime IPV victimization/ perpetrationc | Vict. & perp. | 31.2% (39/125) | 3.69 [2.33, 5.86] | 3.87 [2.43, 6.16] |
| Undirectional vict. | 15.5% (30/193) | 1.74 [1.07, 2.82] | 1.83 [1.13, 2.98] | |
| Neither /missing | 8.9% (38/425) | 1 | 1 | |
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aAge (included as four categories: < 25, 25–29, 30–39, 40+), born in the UK, sexual identity (gay or bisexual/straight), university education, and London clinic site
bp value by Wald test using GEEs. p values< 0.1 are indicated in bold
cMen who reported unidirectional IPV perpetration were excluded since the number of men reporting this measure (n = 11 at month-12 and n = 4 at month-24) was too small to allow for meaningful analysis, and these men did not fit into the ‘neither/missing’ category
Fig. 3Adjusted associations of lifetime and past year measures of IPV victimization with sexual behaviours in the past three months among 436 men who participated in PROUD. a CAS with at least two receptive or at least two insertive CAS partners. b CAS with at least five receptive or at least five insertive CAS partners. c Not known to be on HIV treatment. d The model was fitted to include age in four categories (< 25; 25–29; 30–39; 40+), dichotomous UK born and self-reported sexual identity
Fig. 4Adjusted associations of lifetime and past year measures of IPV perpetration with sexual behaviours in the past three months among 436 men who participated in PROUD. a CAS with at least two receptive or at least two insertive CAS partners. b CAS with at least five receptive or at least five insertive CAS partners. c Not known to be on HIV treatment. d The model was fitted to include age in four categories (< 25; 25–29; 30–39; 40+), dichotomous UK born and self-reported sexual identity