Sexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders in Southern India

Background The HIV epidemic in India remains predominantly concentrated in groups where individuals display high risk behaviours, including men who have sex with men (MSM). Widespread behavioural changes are crucial to the control of HIV, but need to be informed by an understanding of the risk facto...

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Main Author: Phillips, Anna
Other Authors: Boily, Marie-Claude ; Garnett, Geoffrey ; Lowndes, Catherine
Published: Imperial College London 2009
Subjects:
361
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.513496
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5134962017-08-30T03:18:09ZSexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders in Southern IndiaPhillips, AnnaBoily, Marie-Claude ; Garnett, Geoffrey ; Lowndes, Catherine2009Background The HIV epidemic in India remains predominantly concentrated in groups where individuals display high risk behaviours, including men who have sex with men (MSM). Widespread behavioural changes are crucial to the control of HIV, but need to be informed by an understanding of the risk factors for infection. However, reliability and validity of self-reported behaviour are difficult to determine. This thesis aims to contribute to the literature comparing innovative data collection modes for self-reported HIV risk behaviour in developing countries. Methods The Avahan programme is a large-scale HIV-prevention project that focuses on the six states in India with the highest HIV prevalence. The programme focuses on core and bridging groups, including MSM. This thesis presents the findings of one aspect of the monitoring and evaluation: behavioural data collected using face-to-face interviews (FTFI) and informal confidential voting interviews (ICVI) among MSM sampled in public place and Hammam cruising sites in Bangalore. Results A review of empirical data collected in developing countries comparing FTFI with new interviewing tools, found private data collection methods to have mixed success in reducing underreporting of risky behaviour. A comparison of ICVI and FTFI in India found that ICVI significantly increased reporting of stigmatised behaviours, but results did not adhere consistently to expectation. A number of self-identified categories of MSM are commonly applied in the intervention context in India, each of which was generally associated with different HIV-risk behaviours. Although there was evidence of role segregation and identity-specific behaviour, the categories were found to be more fluid than has previously been documented. Bisexual behaviour was common, and condom use with female partners was low, which suggests a potential bridge of HIV transmission into the general population. Conclusions The dataset provided a solid description of HIV risk behaviours among MSM cruising in public places in Bangalore, which has immediate implications for designing appropriate targeted HIV prevention programmes that address fluidity in risk behaviour between MSM identities and reach out to behaviourally bisexual men, rather than treating MSM as a homogenous group. Both the systematic review and the comparison of ICVI and FTFI highlighted difficulties in gathering ‘truthful’ self-reported behaviour, as determining the precise reasoning where individual responses departed from the presumed norm was impossible. Qualitative research might contribute to a better understanding of the motivations behind reporting biases amongst MSM.361Imperial College Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.513496http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/5525Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 361
spellingShingle 361
Phillips, Anna
Sexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders in Southern India
description Background The HIV epidemic in India remains predominantly concentrated in groups where individuals display high risk behaviours, including men who have sex with men (MSM). Widespread behavioural changes are crucial to the control of HIV, but need to be informed by an understanding of the risk factors for infection. However, reliability and validity of self-reported behaviour are difficult to determine. This thesis aims to contribute to the literature comparing innovative data collection modes for self-reported HIV risk behaviour in developing countries. Methods The Avahan programme is a large-scale HIV-prevention project that focuses on the six states in India with the highest HIV prevalence. The programme focuses on core and bridging groups, including MSM. This thesis presents the findings of one aspect of the monitoring and evaluation: behavioural data collected using face-to-face interviews (FTFI) and informal confidential voting interviews (ICVI) among MSM sampled in public place and Hammam cruising sites in Bangalore. Results A review of empirical data collected in developing countries comparing FTFI with new interviewing tools, found private data collection methods to have mixed success in reducing underreporting of risky behaviour. A comparison of ICVI and FTFI in India found that ICVI significantly increased reporting of stigmatised behaviours, but results did not adhere consistently to expectation. A number of self-identified categories of MSM are commonly applied in the intervention context in India, each of which was generally associated with different HIV-risk behaviours. Although there was evidence of role segregation and identity-specific behaviour, the categories were found to be more fluid than has previously been documented. Bisexual behaviour was common, and condom use with female partners was low, which suggests a potential bridge of HIV transmission into the general population. Conclusions The dataset provided a solid description of HIV risk behaviours among MSM cruising in public places in Bangalore, which has immediate implications for designing appropriate targeted HIV prevention programmes that address fluidity in risk behaviour between MSM identities and reach out to behaviourally bisexual men, rather than treating MSM as a homogenous group. Both the systematic review and the comparison of ICVI and FTFI highlighted difficulties in gathering ‘truthful’ self-reported behaviour, as determining the precise reasoning where individual responses departed from the presumed norm was impossible. Qualitative research might contribute to a better understanding of the motivations behind reporting biases amongst MSM.
author2 Boily, Marie-Claude ; Garnett, Geoffrey ; Lowndes, Catherine
author_facet Boily, Marie-Claude ; Garnett, Geoffrey ; Lowndes, Catherine
Phillips, Anna
author Phillips, Anna
author_sort Phillips, Anna
title Sexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders in Southern India
title_short Sexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders in Southern India
title_full Sexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders in Southern India
title_fullStr Sexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders in Southern India
title_full_unstemmed Sexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgenders in Southern India
title_sort sexual behaviour of men who have sex with men (msm) and transgenders in southern india
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2009
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.513496
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