| Literature DB >> 35132480 |
G Prestage1, D Storer2, F Jin2, B Haire2, L Maher2, S Philpot2, B Bavinton2, P Saxton3, D Murphy2, M Holt4, A Bourne2,5, M A Hammoud2.
Abstract
Successful use of biomedical forms of HIV risk-reduction may have predisposed many gay and bisexual men (GBM) to vaccination against COVID-19, which may, in turn, affect their sexual behavior. A total of 622 Australian GBM provided weekly data on COVID-19 vaccination history and sexual behaviour between 17 January 2021 and 22 June 2021. We identify factors associated with COVID-19 vaccination, and compare sexual behavior before and since vaccination. Mean age was 47.3 years (SD 14.0). At least one-dose vaccination coverage had reached 57.2%, and 61.3% reported that the majority of their friends intended to be vaccinated. Vaccinated men reported a mean of 1.11 (SD 2.10) weekly non-relationship sex partners before vaccination and 1.62 (SD 3.42) partners following vaccination. GBM demonstrated high confidence in COVID-19 vaccines. Their sexual activity increased following vaccination suggesting that greater sexual freedom may be a specific motivation for vaccine uptake among some men.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Gay and bisexual men; Sexual behaviour; Vaccines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35132480 PMCID: PMC8821860 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-022-03611-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1International comparisons of vaccine rollout.
Source: https://ourworldindata.org/covid-vaccinations
Timeline: study milestones and COVID-19 pandemic responses in Australia
| Date | Study milestones | COVID-19 in Australia |
|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Cohort study established | |
| 2014–2019 | Participants complete surveys at 6-monthly intervals | |
| January 2020 | First case appears | |
| March 2020 | Initial local travel and physicial distancing restrictions imposed in each state and territory Border restrictions established, limiting international entry | |
| April 2020 | Six-monthly survey includes initial COVID-19 impact | |
| May 2020 | Participants commence brief weekly surveys | |
| June 2020 | New participants commence being enrolled | |
| February 2021 | Pfizer-BioNTech (Cominarty TM) & Oxford-AstraZeneca TM receive regulatory approval COVID-19 vaccine rollout to priority groups commences | |
| March 2021 | AstraZeneca vaccine rollout commences Vaccination in primary care settings commences | |
| April 2021 | Age restrictions on AstraZeneca vaccine in response to reports of thrombosis and thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS) | |
| May 2021 | Weekly brief surveys finish, replaced by quarterly surveys | |
| June 2021 | First quarterly survey | 7.65 million Australian adults vaccinated |
| July 2021 | Rules restricting vaccination to only vulnerable groups eased |
Numbers and proportions of GBM responding each study week who were tested for COVID-19 and who received COVID-19 vaccinations. (N = 622)
| Date | Week number | Number of responses | Proportion tested for COVID-19 in previous 7 days | Number of initial vaccinations reported | Proportion of all vaccinations reported (N = 347) | Cumulative number of initial vaccinations reported | Cumulative proportion vaccinated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10-May-20 to 10-Jan-21 | 1–36 | 570 | NA | 0 | 0.0% | 0 | 0.0% |
| 17-Jan-21 | 37 | 417 | 4.3% | 2 | 0.6% | 2 | 0.3% |
| 24-Jan-21 | 38 | 429 | 4.4% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 0.3% |
| 31-Jan-21 | 39 | 438 | 3.0% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 0.3% |
| 07-Feb-21 | 40 | 437 | 5.3% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 0.3% |
| 14-Feb-21 | 41 | 439 | 3.4% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 0.3% |
| 21-Feb-21 | 42 | 442 | 3.2% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 0.3% |
| 28-Feb-21 | 43 | 431 | 2.3% | 3 | 0.9% | 5 | 0.8% |
| 07-Mar-21 | 44 | 441 | 3.6% | 3 | 0.9% | 8 | 1.3% |
| 14-Mar-21 | 45 | 429 | 4.0% | 4 | 1.2% | 12 | 2.0% |
| 21-Mar-21 | 46 | 435 | 2.5% | 7 | 2.0% | 19 | 3.2% |
| 28-Mar-21 | 47 | 423 | 4.3% | 18 | 5.2% | 37 | 6.1% |
| 4-Apr-21 | 48 | 427 | 6.3% | 18 | 5.2% | 55 | 9.1% |
| 11-Apr-21 | 49 | 424 | 4.3% | 11 | 3.2% | 66 | 10.9% |
| 18-Apr-21 | 50 | 424 | 4.5% | 14 | 4.0% | 80 | 13.3% |
| 25-Apr-21 | 51 | 423 | 2.6% | 13 | 3.7% | 93 | 15.4% |
| 2-May-21 | 52 | 410 | 4.4% | 13 | 3.7% | 106 | 17.6% |
| 22-Jun-21 | 59 | 536 | 5.6%* | 34* | 9.6%* | 356 | 57.2% |
*Represents a mean value across the intervening 7 weeks between weeks 52 and 59. Number of actual initial vaccinations between weeks 52 and 59 was 250, representing 70.2% of all vaccinations received
Fig. 2Weekly and cumulative vaccination rates (N = 622)
Characteristics of sample according to whether vaccinated or not vaccinated. (N = 622)
| N (%) | Unvaccinated (n = 266) | Vaccinated (n = 356) | OR (95% CI) | p-value | aOR (95% CI) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age–mean (SD) | | |||||
| 16–30 | 55 (64.7) | 30 (35.3) | ||||
| 31–40 | 91 (64.5) | 50 (35.5) | ||||
| 41–50 | 52 (40.9) | 75 (59.1) | ||||
| 51–60 | 44 (32.8) | 90 (67.2) | ||||
| Over 60 | 19 (15.1) | 107 (84.9) | ||||
| No data | 5 | 4 | ||||
| Education | ||||||
| Postgraduate | 80 (35.4) | 146 (64.6) | 1.00 | |||
| Undergraduate | 99 (46.9) | 112 (53.1) | 0.63 (0.42–0.91) | 0.015 | ||
| Not university-level | 84 (46.7) | 96 (53.3) | 0.62 (0.42–0.93) | 0.022 | ||
| No data | 3 | 2 | ||||
| Employment status | ||||||
| Full-time employed | 169 (44.6) | 210 (55.4) | 1.00 | |||
| Part-time employed | 42 (47.2) | 47 (52.8) | 0.68 (0.44–1.03) | 0.068 | ||
| Not in workforce | 55 (35.7) | 99 (64.3) | 0.69 (0.47–1.01) | 0.058 | ||
| Occupation | ||||||
| Profession/manager | 147 (41.4) | 208 (58.6) | 1.00 | |||
| Other | 64 (56.6) | 49 (43.4) | 0.54 (0.35–0.83) | 0.005 | ||
| Not in workforce | 55 (35.7) | 99 (64.3) | 1.27 (0.86–1.88) | 0.228 | ||
| State | ||||||
| NSW | 123 (44.6) | 153 (55.4) | 1.00 | |||
| Victoria | 61 (39.4) | 94 (60.6) | 1.24 (0.83–1.85) | 0.294 | ||
| Queensland | 31 (38.3) | 50 (61.7) | 1.30 (0.78–2.15) | 0.315 | ||
| Other states/territories | 43 (46.2) | 50 (53.8) | 0.88 (0.54–1.43) | 0.613 | ||
| No data | 8 | 9 | ||||
| Country of birth | ||||||
| Australia/New Zealand | 210 (42.1) | 289 (57.9) | 1.00 | |||
| Elsewhere | 42 (41.2) | 60 (58.8) | 1.04 (0.67–1.60) | 0.866 | ||
| No data | 14 | 7 | ||||
| Sexual identity | ||||||
| Gay | 232 (41.7) | 325 (58.3) | 1.00 | |||
| Other | 27 (50.9) | 26 (49.1) | 0.69 (0.39–1.21) | 0.193 | ||
| No data | 7 | 5 | ||||
| HIV serostatus | ||||||
| HIV-negative | 227 (42.3) | 310 (57.7) | 1.00 | |||
| HIV-positive | 22 (38.6) | 35 (61.4) | 1.17 (0.67–2.04) | 0.593 | ||
| Unknown/untested | 17 (60.7) | 11 (39.3) | 0.47 (0.22–1.03) | 0.060 | ||
| Influenza vaccination | ||||||
| Not vaccinated | 112 (53.8) | 96 (46.2) | 1.00 | |||
| Has been vaccinated | 154 (37.2) | 260 (62.8) | 1.97 (1.41–2.76) | < 0.001 | ||
| Sexual contact with non-relationship partners in most recent week | ||||||
| No non-relationship partners | 153 (45.3) | 185 (54.7) | 1.00 | |||
| Any non-relationship partners | 104 (39.2) | 161 (60.8) | 1.28 (0.92–1.78) | 0.138 | ||
| No data | 9 | 10 | ||||
| COVID-19 test number—mean (SD) | ||||||
| Never tested | 108 (45.8) | 128 (54.2) | ||||
| Ever tested | 158 (40.9) | 228 (59.1) | ||||
| Beliefs about how long COVID-19 restrictions would be needed | ||||||
| Longer than a year | 99 (35.2) | 182 (64.8) | 1.00 | 1.00 | ||
| About 1 year | 112 (44.4) | 140 (55.6) | 0.68 (0.48–096) | 0.030 | 0.83 (0.55–1.25) | 0.370 |
| Less than 1 year | 55 (61.8) | 34 (38.2) | 0.34 (0.21–0.55) | < 0.001 | 0.36 (0.21–0.64) | < 0.001 |
| Number of friends intending to be vaccinated | ||||||
| None/less than half | 124 (56.4) | 96 (43.6) | 1.00 | |||
| Majority | 132 (34.6) | 249(65.4) | 2.44 (1.73–3.42) | < 0.001 | ||
| No data | 10 | 11 | ||||
| “I am worried about side effects”—mean (SD) | ||||||
| Strongly disagree | 42 (32.3) | 88 (67.7) | ||||
| Disagree | 51 (32.5) | 106 (67.5) | ||||
| Slightly disagree | 31 (44.3) | 39 (55.7) | ||||
| Slightly agree | 80 (46.5) | 92 (53.5) | ||||
| Agree | 34 (59.6) | 23 (40.4) | ||||
| Strongly agree | 28 (77.8) | 8 (22.2) | ||||
| “Vaccines are too new to be confident”—mean (SD) | ||||||
| Strongly disagree | 84 (31.3) | 184 (68.7) | ||||
| Disagree | 86 (42.8) | 115 (57.2) | ||||
| Slightly disagree | 29 (50.0) | 29 (50.0) | ||||
| Slightly agree | 29 (58.0) | 21 (42.0) | ||||
| Agree | 15 (71.4) | 6 (28.6) | ||||
| Strongly agree | 23 (95.8) | 1 (4.2) | ||||
| Number of friends & family spent physical time with in previous 7 days—mean (SD) |
Bold values describe statistics for variable, with specific response categories in following rows
Type and dosage of vaccine received and number of sex partners before and since vaccination according to date of vaccination. (N = 356)
| Vaccinated by May 2nd 2021 | Vaccinated between May 3rd and June 30th 2021 | χ2 | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccination type | ||||
| AstraZeneca | 78 (73.6) | 136 (54.4) | ||
| Pfizer | 26 (24.5) | 113 (45.2) | ||
| Novavax/covax | 1 (0.9) | 1 (0.4) | ||
| Unknown | 1 (0.9) | 0 (0.0) | ||
| Number of doses (by week 59) | ||||
| First dose only | 61 (57.5) | 186 (74.4) | ||
| Second dose | 45 (42.5) | 64 (25.6) |
Bold values describe statistics for variable, with specific response categories in following rows
Beliefs about effectiveness, safety, and impact of COVID-19 vaccines at week 59. (N = 536)
| Vaccinated by May 2nd 2021 | Vaccinated between May 3rd and June 30th 2021 | Unvaccinated (N = 191) | χ2 | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| “AstraZeneca and Pfizer are equally effective” | |||||
| Disagree | 38 (40.0) | 77 (31.2) | 92 (49.5) | ||
| Agree | 57 (60.0) | 170 (68.8) | 94 (50.5) | ||
| No data | 0 | 3 | 5 | ||
| “I doubt vaccine safety” | |||||
| Disagree | 80 (84.2) | 210 (85.1) | 131 (69.3) | ||
| Agree | 15 (15.8) | 37 (14.9) | 58 (30.8) | ||
| No data | 0 | 3 | 2 | ||
| “After vaccines we can forget about COVID” | |||||
| Disagree | 82 (86.3) | 203 (82.3) | 165 (87.3) | ||
| Agree | 13 (13.7) | 44 (17.7) | 24 (12.7) | ||
| No data | 0 | 3 | 2 | ||
| “Having vaccine will make following feel safer” | |||||
| Being out in public | 86 (90.5) | 224 (89.6) | 149 (78.0) | ||
| Using public transport | 82 (86.3) | 213 (85.2) | 146 (76.4) | ||
| Having casual sex | 58 (61.1) | 166 (66.4) | 105 (55.0) |
Bold values describe statistics for variable, with specific response categories in following rows