AI Article Synopsis

  • BMSM (Black men who have sex with men) face higher levels of violence, substance use, and health issues compared to other racial groups, with those involved in sex work (BMSM-SW) facing even greater psychosocial challenges and health risks like STIs and HIV.
  • Most BMSM-SW reported having female clients and were more prone to hire other sex workers; they also experienced greater stigma related to race, sexuality, and HIV status compared to other BMSM.
  • Intersectional stigma significantly affects the mental health and wellbeing of BMSM-SW, mediating 49% of the link between sex work and psychosocial issues, highlighting the need for resilience-focused interventions.

Article Abstract

Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) in the United States experience a disproportionate burden of violence, substance use, physical and mental health conditions relative to other racial groups. BMSM who engage in sex work (BMSM-SW) experience a high burden of psychosocial conditions, sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, and intersectional stigma. This analysis characterizes remuneration and client typologies for BMSM-SW, documents intersectional stigma experienced by BMSM-SW relative to other BMSM, and explores the impact of experienced intersectional stigma on the relationship between sex work engagement and psychosocial syndemic conditions (violence, polydrug use, and depression symptoms). Results show that a majority of BMSM-SW in the sample had female clients and that sex workers were more likely than other BMSM to hire another sex worker. BMSM-SW were more likely than other BMSM to report stigma attributed to race; sexuality; HIV status; socioeconomic status; and "other" attributes, and were more likely to report experiencing stigma across all settings assessed (schools; healthcare; employment; housing; police/courts; and in public/community). Intersectional stigma mediated the relationship between sex work engagement and psychosocial syndemic conditions, accounting for 49% (95% CI: 47.6-50.0%) of the relationship. Interventions for BMSM-SW should include resilience-building components to counteract the effects of intersectional stigma.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9835797PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00224499.2022.2072799DOI Listing

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