Inter-partner and Temporal Variations in the Perception of Sexual Risk for HIV

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Abstract

This study uses longitudinal qualitative methods to examine how gay and bisexual men perceive sexual risk across both a variety of partners and across time. Over ten weeks, participants completed three quantitative personal relationship diaries (PRD) describing sexual encounters during that time period. Participants then completed a timeline-based individual in-depth interview to unpack the PRD data. Participants used multiple factors to determine their own sexual risk (e.g., type of sex, partner concurrency, emotional connections), which often resulted in inconsistencies in defining sexual risk and determining the level of risk both within and across partners and across time. These findings can inform HIV prevention messages and programming.

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Goldenberg, T., Darbes, L. A., & Stephenson, R. (2018). Inter-partner and Temporal Variations in the Perception of Sexual Risk for HIV. AIDS and Behavior, 22(6), 1870–1884. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-017-1876-5

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