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HIV care engagement and ART adherence among Kenyan gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men: a multi-level model informed by qualitative research

机译:艾滋病毒关心参与和艺术遵守肯尼亚同性恋,双性恋和其他与男性发生性关系的男人:定性研究知情的多级模型

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摘要

Gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM) are highly stigmatized and male-male sex is often criminalized in sub-Saharan Africa, impeding access to quality care for sexual health, HIV prevention, and treatment. To better understand HIV care engagement and antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence among GBMSM in this context, a conceptual model incorporating sociocultural factors is needed. We conducted a qualitative study of barriers to and facilitators of HIV care engagement and ART adherence among Kenyan GBMSM, informed by a conceptual model based on an access, information, motivation, and behavioral skills (access-IMB) model, with trust in providers and stigma and discrimination as a priori factors of interest. We conducted 30 semi-structured interviews with HIV-positive Kenyan GBMSM, of whom 20 were taking ART and 10 had not yet initiated treatment. A deductive approach was used to confirm the relevance of basic concepts of the access-IMB model, while an inductive approach was used to identify content that emerged from men's lived experiences. Access-related information, motivation, and behavioral skills appeared relevant to HIV care engagement and ART adherence, with stigma and discrimination appearing consistently across discourse exploring facilitators and barriers. Trusted providers and supportive family and friends helped many men, and resilience-related concepts such as selective disclosure of GBMSM status, connection to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) organizations, self-acceptance, goal-setting, social identity and altruism emerged as important facilitators. Findings suggest a need to increase support from providers and peers for Kenyan GBMSM living with HIV infection. In addition, they point toward the potential value of interventions that provide opportunities to build or enhance one's sense of community belonging in order to improve HIV care engagement and promote ART adherence for this vulnerable population.
机译:与男性(GBMSM)发生性关系的同性恋,双性恋和其他男性高度侮辱,男性性别往往在撒哈拉以南非洲犯罪,阻碍了对性健康,艾滋病毒预防和治疗的优质护理。在这种情况下,为了更好地了解GBMSM之间的艾滋病毒护理参与和抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)遵守GBMSM,需要一种包含社会文化因素的概念模型。我们对肯尼亚GBMSM之间的艾滋病毒护理参与和艺术遵守者进行了定性研究,通过基于访问,信息,动机和行为技能(Access-IMB)模型,以信任提供商和提供者的访问耻辱和歧视作为利益的先验因素。我们与艾滋病毒阳性肯尼亚GBMSM进行了30次半结构化访谈,其中20名正在采用艺术品,10名尚未开始治疗。用于证实Access-IMB模型的基本概念的相关方法,而归纳方法用于识别来自男性生活经历的内容。与艾滋病毒关心参与和艺术遵守相关的访问相关的信息,动机和行为技能,耻辱和歧视在话语中持续出现在探索促进者和障碍。值得信赖的提供商和支持性的家庭和朋友帮助许多男性,以及恢复力相关的概念,如选择性披露GBMSM状态,与女同性恋,同性恋,双性恋和变性人(LGBT)组织,自我接受,目标设置,社会认同和利他主义成为重要的协调人。调查结果表明,需要增加提供者和同行的支持,肯尼亚GBMSM与艾滋病毒感染一起生活。此外,他们指出了潜在的干预措施的价值,为建立或增强一个人的社区感,以改善艾滋病毒护理参与并促进这种脆弱人群的艺术遵守。

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