HIV Research with Men who Have Sex with Men (MSM): Advantages and Challenges of Different Methods for Most Appropriately Targeting a Key Population

The difficulty in accessing hard-to-reach populations as men who have sex with men presents a dilemma for HIV surveillance as their omission from surveillance systems leaves significant gaps in our understanding of HIV/AIDS epidemics. Several methods for recruiting difficult-to-access populations an...

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Main Authors: Ana Gama, Maria O. Martins, Sónia Dias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2017-05-01
Series:AIMS Public Health
Subjects:
HIV
Online Access:http://www.aimspress.com/aimsph/article/1431/fulltext.html
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spelling doaj-07e0f9d5fd1c4e4c8e8c9552767fc7132020-11-24T21:40:21ZengAIMS PressAIMS Public Health2327-89942017-05-014322123910.3934/publichealth.2017.3.221publichealth-04-00221HIV Research with Men who Have Sex with Men (MSM): Advantages and Challenges of Different Methods for Most Appropriately Targeting a Key PopulationAna Gama0Maria O. Martins1Sónia Dias2Global Health and Tropical Medicine, GHTM, Instituto de Higiene e Medicina Tropical, IHMT, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, UNL, Lisboa, PortugalGlobal Health and Tropical Medicine, GHTM, Instituto de Higiene e Medicina Tropical, IHMT, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, UNL, Lisboa, PortugalGlobal Health and Tropical Medicine, GHTM, Instituto de Higiene e Medicina Tropical, IHMT, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, UNL, Lisboa, PortugalThe difficulty in accessing hard-to-reach populations as men who have sex with men presents a dilemma for HIV surveillance as their omission from surveillance systems leaves significant gaps in our understanding of HIV/AIDS epidemics. Several methods for recruiting difficult-to-access populations and collecting data on trends of HIV prevalence and behavioural factors for surveillance and research purposes have emerged. This paper aims to critically review different sampling approaches, from chain-referral and venue-based to respondent-driven, time-location and internet sampling methods, focusing on its main advantages and challenges for conducting HIV research among key populations, such as men who have sex with men. The benefits of using these approaches to recruit participants must be weighed against privacy concerns inherent in any social situation or health condition. Nevertheless, the methods discussed in this paper represent some of the best efforts to effectively reach most-at-risk subgroups of men who have sex with men, contributing to obtain unbiased trends of HIV prevalence and HIV-related risk behaviours among this population group.http://www.aimspress.com/aimsph/article/1431/fulltext.htmlHIVMen who have sex with mensurveillanceresearchsampling methods
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ana Gama
Maria O. Martins
Sónia Dias
spellingShingle Ana Gama
Maria O. Martins
Sónia Dias
HIV Research with Men who Have Sex with Men (MSM): Advantages and Challenges of Different Methods for Most Appropriately Targeting a Key Population
AIMS Public Health
HIV
Men who have sex with men
surveillance
research
sampling methods
author_facet Ana Gama
Maria O. Martins
Sónia Dias
author_sort Ana Gama
title HIV Research with Men who Have Sex with Men (MSM): Advantages and Challenges of Different Methods for Most Appropriately Targeting a Key Population
title_short HIV Research with Men who Have Sex with Men (MSM): Advantages and Challenges of Different Methods for Most Appropriately Targeting a Key Population
title_full HIV Research with Men who Have Sex with Men (MSM): Advantages and Challenges of Different Methods for Most Appropriately Targeting a Key Population
title_fullStr HIV Research with Men who Have Sex with Men (MSM): Advantages and Challenges of Different Methods for Most Appropriately Targeting a Key Population
title_full_unstemmed HIV Research with Men who Have Sex with Men (MSM): Advantages and Challenges of Different Methods for Most Appropriately Targeting a Key Population
title_sort hiv research with men who have sex with men (msm): advantages and challenges of different methods for most appropriately targeting a key population
publisher AIMS Press
series AIMS Public Health
issn 2327-8994
publishDate 2017-05-01
description The difficulty in accessing hard-to-reach populations as men who have sex with men presents a dilemma for HIV surveillance as their omission from surveillance systems leaves significant gaps in our understanding of HIV/AIDS epidemics. Several methods for recruiting difficult-to-access populations and collecting data on trends of HIV prevalence and behavioural factors for surveillance and research purposes have emerged. This paper aims to critically review different sampling approaches, from chain-referral and venue-based to respondent-driven, time-location and internet sampling methods, focusing on its main advantages and challenges for conducting HIV research among key populations, such as men who have sex with men. The benefits of using these approaches to recruit participants must be weighed against privacy concerns inherent in any social situation or health condition. Nevertheless, the methods discussed in this paper represent some of the best efforts to effectively reach most-at-risk subgroups of men who have sex with men, contributing to obtain unbiased trends of HIV prevalence and HIV-related risk behaviours among this population group.
topic HIV
Men who have sex with men
surveillance
research
sampling methods
url http://www.aimspress.com/aimsph/article/1431/fulltext.html
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