| Literature DB >> 31289985 |
Daniel Teixeira da Silva1,2, Alida Bouris3,4, Dexter Voisin3,4, Anna Hotton4, Russell Brewer4, John Schneider5,4,6.
Abstract
The interaction between the cumulative effect of psychosocial and structural factors (i.e. syndemic effect) and social networks among young Black transgender women and men who have sex with men (YBTM) remains understudied. A representative cohort of 16-29 year-old YBTM (n = 618) was assessed for syndemic factors [i.e. substance use; community violence; depression; poverty; justice system involvement (JSI)], social network characteristics, condomless anal sex (CAS), group sex (GS), and HIV-infection. The syndemic index significantly increased the odds of CAS, GS, and HIV-infection, and these effects were moderated by network characteristics. Network JSI buffered the effect on CAS, romantic network members buffered the effect on GS, and network age and proportion of family network members buffered the effect on HIV-infection. The proportion of friend network members augmented the effect on GS and HIV-infection. Future research to prevent HIV among YBTM should consider social network approaches that target both structural and psychosocial syndemic factors.Entities:
Keywords: Black; HIV; MSM; Syndemic; Transgender women
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31289985 PMCID: PMC7263264 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-019-02575-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165