Internet Advertisements for Public Sexual Encounters Among Men Who Have Sex With Men

Public and commercial sex venues typically provide easy access to sexual encounters that are often anonymous and, therefore, may facilitate HIV/STD transmission among those men who attend. Recently, researchers have suggested that men who have sex with men may be using the Internet to search for sex...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Martin J. Downing PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2011-09-01
Series:American Journal of Men's Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988310376958
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spelling doaj-fb512ee995334f8d8eff230fb2d2b7922020-11-25T03:15:24ZengSAGE PublishingAmerican Journal of Men's Health1557-98831557-98912011-09-01510.1177/1557988310376958Internet Advertisements for Public Sexual Encounters Among Men Who Have Sex With MenMartin J. Downing PhD0The City University of New York, New York, NY, USAPublic and commercial sex venues typically provide easy access to sexual encounters that are often anonymous and, therefore, may facilitate HIV/STD transmission among those men who attend. Recently, researchers have suggested that men who have sex with men may be using the Internet to search for sexual encounters to occur within sex venues. The current study explored the extent to which men who advertise for public or commercial sexual encounters initially communicate to potential partners their safe-sex intentions. Advertisements for sexual encounters ( n = 99) were collected from a publicly accessible website and examined for content related to venue type, sexual behavior, and indications of sexual safety or risk. Word frequencies were calculated to provide a closer investigation of how individuals negotiate safe sex within these communications. The findings revealed that approximately half of the men who advertised for sex in a public or commercial sex venue failed to communicate to potential partners in their initial advertisement a desire to be safe during sexual encounters involving oral and anal practices. Additionally, a small percentage of men advertised specifically for risky encounters (e.g., barebacking). Together, these findings suggest that men do use the Internet to coordinate public sexual encounters, some of which may be unprotected from HIV/STD transmission. Future research should address the process of condom negotiation among men who initially meet their male sex partners on the Internet for subsequent encounters in sex venues.https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988310376958
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin J. Downing PhD
spellingShingle Martin J. Downing PhD
Internet Advertisements for Public Sexual Encounters Among Men Who Have Sex With Men
American Journal of Men's Health
author_facet Martin J. Downing PhD
author_sort Martin J. Downing PhD
title Internet Advertisements for Public Sexual Encounters Among Men Who Have Sex With Men
title_short Internet Advertisements for Public Sexual Encounters Among Men Who Have Sex With Men
title_full Internet Advertisements for Public Sexual Encounters Among Men Who Have Sex With Men
title_fullStr Internet Advertisements for Public Sexual Encounters Among Men Who Have Sex With Men
title_full_unstemmed Internet Advertisements for Public Sexual Encounters Among Men Who Have Sex With Men
title_sort internet advertisements for public sexual encounters among men who have sex with men
publisher SAGE Publishing
series American Journal of Men's Health
issn 1557-9883
1557-9891
publishDate 2011-09-01
description Public and commercial sex venues typically provide easy access to sexual encounters that are often anonymous and, therefore, may facilitate HIV/STD transmission among those men who attend. Recently, researchers have suggested that men who have sex with men may be using the Internet to search for sexual encounters to occur within sex venues. The current study explored the extent to which men who advertise for public or commercial sexual encounters initially communicate to potential partners their safe-sex intentions. Advertisements for sexual encounters ( n = 99) were collected from a publicly accessible website and examined for content related to venue type, sexual behavior, and indications of sexual safety or risk. Word frequencies were calculated to provide a closer investigation of how individuals negotiate safe sex within these communications. The findings revealed that approximately half of the men who advertised for sex in a public or commercial sex venue failed to communicate to potential partners in their initial advertisement a desire to be safe during sexual encounters involving oral and anal practices. Additionally, a small percentage of men advertised specifically for risky encounters (e.g., barebacking). Together, these findings suggest that men do use the Internet to coordinate public sexual encounters, some of which may be unprotected from HIV/STD transmission. Future research should address the process of condom negotiation among men who initially meet their male sex partners on the Internet for subsequent encounters in sex venues.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988310376958
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