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Social Media Use and HIV Screening Uptake Among Deaf Adults in the United States: Cross-Sectional Survey Study

机译:美国聋人成年人的社交媒体使用和HIV筛查摄取:跨部门调查研究

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Background: About 46% of US adults obtain recommended HIV screening at least once during their lifetime. There is little knowledge of screening rates among deaf and hard-of-hearing adults who primarily use American Sign Language (ASL), or of social media as a potentially efficacious route for HIV prevention outreach, despite lower HIV/AIDS-specific health literacy and potentially higher HIV seropositivity rates than hearing peers. Objective: We investigated both the likelihood of HIV screening uptake among deaf adults in the past year and over one year ago, and the relationship between social media use and HIV screening uptake among deaf adult ASL users. Methods: The Health Information National Trends Survey in ASL was administered to 1340 deaf US adults between 2015-2018. Modified Poisson with robust standard errors was used to assess the relationship between social media usage as a predictor and HIV screening as an outcome (screened more than one year ago, screened within the past year, and never been screened), after adjusting for sociodemographics and sexually transmitted disease (STD) covariates. Results: The estimated lifetime prevalence of HIV screening uptake among our sample was 54% (719/1340), with 32% (429/1340) in the past year. Being of younger age, male gender, black, lesbian, gay, bisexual, or queer, or having some college education or a prior STD were associated with HIV screening uptake. Adjusting for correlates, social media use was significantly associated with HIV screening in the past year, compared to either lifetime or never. Conclusions: Screening falls well short of universal screening targets, with gaps among heterosexual, female, Caucasian, or older deaf adults. HIV screening outreach may not be effective because of technological or linguistic inaccessibility, rendering ASL users an underrecognized minority group. However, social media is still a powerful tool, particularly among younger deaf adults at risk for HIV.
机译:背景:大约46%的美国成年人一生中至少接受过一次推荐的HIV筛查。尽管主要针对美国艾滋病毒/艾滋病的健康知识水平较低,但主要使用美国手语(ASL)或社交媒体作为预防艾滋病毒的潜在有效途径的聋哑人士和听力较弱的成年人对筛查率的了解很少。与其他同龄人相比,艾滋病毒血清阳性率可能更高。目的:我们调查了过去一年和一年多前聋人中接受艾滋病毒筛查的可能性,以及社交媒体使用与聋人成年ASL用户中艾滋病毒筛查吸收之间的关系。方法:2015年至2018年之间,对1340名美国聋人成年人进行了ASL的《健康信息国家趋势调查》。在调整了社会人口统计学和性传播疾病(STD)协变量。结果:在我们的样本中,估计的HIV筛查终生流行率为54%(719/1340),而去年为32%(429/1340)。年龄较小,男性,黑人,女同性恋,男同性恋,双性恋者或同性恋者,或者具有一定的大学学历或性传播感染,都与接受HIV筛查有关。调整相关性后,过去一年中,社交媒体的使用与HIV筛查显着相关,而终生或从未有过。结论:筛查远未达到普遍筛查的目标,在异性恋者,女性,白种人或聋哑成年人中存在差距。由于技术或语言的不可及性,艾滋病毒筛查的推广可能无效,这使ASL使用者成为未被认可的少数群体。但是,社交媒体仍然是一个强大的工具,尤其是在面临艾滋病毒感染风险的年轻聋哑人中。

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