AI Article Synopsis

  • - Acculturation affects sexual risk behaviors among Latino men who have sex with men (MSM), but the specifics of this influence are not well understood, especially compared to heterosexual Latinos.
  • - A study in New York City with 412 Latino MSM identified that factors like language use and nativity status influence the relationship between internalized homophobia, discrimination, and engaging in serodiscordant condomless anal intercourse (SDCAI).
  • - The findings suggest that elements of acculturation shape how stressors and protective factors impact HIV risk, indicating a need for further research into these varying influences on sexual behaviors within the community.

Article Abstract

Acculturation is associated with increased sexual risk behaviors among heterosexual Latinos, but its influence among Latino gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) remains less clear. Elements of acculturation may create distinct lived experiences among sexual minority Latinos, moderating how beneficial and adverse influences contribute to their sexual risk behaviors. Latino MSM living in New York City (n = 412) were recruited using a modified time-space venue- and web-based sampling method. Negative binomial regression models estimated associations between indicators of acculturation (i.e., language use, nativity status, ethnic identification), sexual minority stressors (i.e., internalized homophobia, sexual orientation-based discrimination), peer condom use norms, and the number of serodiscordant condomless anal intercourse (SDCAI) encounters. Acculturation indicators were then tested as simultaneous moderators of the influence of each predictor variable on the outcome. The association between internalized homophobia and SDCAI was significant only among English language speakers (aIRR = 3.05 [2.13, 4.37]) and those born outside of the U.S. (foreign-born = 0, aIRR = 0.17 [0.08, 0.36]). Sexual orientation-based discrimination and SDCAI were also positively associated among both English-speaking (aIRR = 1.82 [1.22, 2.72]) and foreign-born men (aIRR = 0.34 [0.14, 0.84]). Stronger ethnic identification also moderated the protective effects of peer condom use norms on SDCAI (aIRR = 0.28 [0.15, 0.52]). Results suggest that different dimensions of acculturation help shape how both stressors and protective factors influence HIV risk among Latino MSM. Future research is needed to examine the mechanisms through which these differences in acculturation may act on sexual risk behaviors among Latino MSM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7302998PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-019-01604-xDOI Listing

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