Willingness to Act upon Beliefs about 'Treatment as Prevention' among Australian Gay and Bisexual Men.

HIV 'treatment as prevention' (TasP) is highly effective in reducing HIV transmission in serodiscordant couples. There has been little examination of gay and bisexual men's attitudes towards TasP, particularly regarding men's willingness to act on beliefs about TasP. We conducted...

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Main Authors: Benjamin R Bavinton, Martin Holt, Andrew E Grulich, Graham Brown, Iryna B Zablotska, Garrett P Prestage
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4704706?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a3d914fa2b8e40d8bf4ebbaacd25aed92020-11-25T02:23:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01111e014584710.1371/journal.pone.0145847Willingness to Act upon Beliefs about 'Treatment as Prevention' among Australian Gay and Bisexual Men.Benjamin R BavintonMartin HoltAndrew E GrulichGraham BrownIryna B ZablotskaGarrett P PrestageHIV 'treatment as prevention' (TasP) is highly effective in reducing HIV transmission in serodiscordant couples. There has been little examination of gay and bisexual men's attitudes towards TasP, particularly regarding men's willingness to act on beliefs about TasP. We conducted an online cross-sectional survey of Australian men in late 2012 to investigate knowledge and beliefs about new developments in HIV prevention. Amongst 839 men (mean age 39.5 years), men tended to disagree that TasP was sufficiently effective to justify reduced condom use, although HIV-positive men had more favourable attitudes. Only a minority of men were aware of any evidence for TasP; and one-quarter incorrectly believed that evidence for the effectiveness of TasP already existed for the homosexual population. One-fifth (20.5%) of men reported that they would be willing to have condomless anal intercourse with an opposite-status sexual partner when the HIV-positive partner was taking HIV treatments. Factors independently associated with such willingness were: HIV-positive serostatus, reporting any serodiscordant or serononconcordant condomless anal intercourse with a regular male partner in the previous six months, reporting any condomless anal intercourse with a casual male partner in the previous six months, and having greater beliefs in the effectiveness of TasP. This indicated that the men most willing to rely on TasP to prevent transmission were already engaging in higher risk practices. Biomedical HIV prevention represents a rapidly changing environment with new research as well as community and policy responses emerging at a fast pace. For men with serodiscordant sexual partners to successfully apply TasP to reducing transmission risk, more support and education is needed to enable better utilisation of TasP in specific relational and sexual contexts.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4704706?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin R Bavinton
Martin Holt
Andrew E Grulich
Graham Brown
Iryna B Zablotska
Garrett P Prestage
spellingShingle Benjamin R Bavinton
Martin Holt
Andrew E Grulich
Graham Brown
Iryna B Zablotska
Garrett P Prestage
Willingness to Act upon Beliefs about 'Treatment as Prevention' among Australian Gay and Bisexual Men.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Benjamin R Bavinton
Martin Holt
Andrew E Grulich
Graham Brown
Iryna B Zablotska
Garrett P Prestage
author_sort Benjamin R Bavinton
title Willingness to Act upon Beliefs about 'Treatment as Prevention' among Australian Gay and Bisexual Men.
title_short Willingness to Act upon Beliefs about 'Treatment as Prevention' among Australian Gay and Bisexual Men.
title_full Willingness to Act upon Beliefs about 'Treatment as Prevention' among Australian Gay and Bisexual Men.
title_fullStr Willingness to Act upon Beliefs about 'Treatment as Prevention' among Australian Gay and Bisexual Men.
title_full_unstemmed Willingness to Act upon Beliefs about 'Treatment as Prevention' among Australian Gay and Bisexual Men.
title_sort willingness to act upon beliefs about 'treatment as prevention' among australian gay and bisexual men.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description HIV 'treatment as prevention' (TasP) is highly effective in reducing HIV transmission in serodiscordant couples. There has been little examination of gay and bisexual men's attitudes towards TasP, particularly regarding men's willingness to act on beliefs about TasP. We conducted an online cross-sectional survey of Australian men in late 2012 to investigate knowledge and beliefs about new developments in HIV prevention. Amongst 839 men (mean age 39.5 years), men tended to disagree that TasP was sufficiently effective to justify reduced condom use, although HIV-positive men had more favourable attitudes. Only a minority of men were aware of any evidence for TasP; and one-quarter incorrectly believed that evidence for the effectiveness of TasP already existed for the homosexual population. One-fifth (20.5%) of men reported that they would be willing to have condomless anal intercourse with an opposite-status sexual partner when the HIV-positive partner was taking HIV treatments. Factors independently associated with such willingness were: HIV-positive serostatus, reporting any serodiscordant or serononconcordant condomless anal intercourse with a regular male partner in the previous six months, reporting any condomless anal intercourse with a casual male partner in the previous six months, and having greater beliefs in the effectiveness of TasP. This indicated that the men most willing to rely on TasP to prevent transmission were already engaging in higher risk practices. Biomedical HIV prevention represents a rapidly changing environment with new research as well as community and policy responses emerging at a fast pace. For men with serodiscordant sexual partners to successfully apply TasP to reducing transmission risk, more support and education is needed to enable better utilisation of TasP in specific relational and sexual contexts.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4704706?pdf=render
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