Litcius/Paper detail

Living While Black, Gay, and Poor: The Association of Race, Neighborhood Structural Disadvantage, and Prep Utilization Among a Sample of Black Men Who Have Sex With Men in the Deep South

Paul Burns, Casey D. Xavier Hall, Tonia Poteat, Leandro Mena, Frank Y. Wong

2021AIDS Education and Prevention28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Utilizing the Andersen Healthcare Utilization Model, we examined the role of neighborhood context on pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) utilization among a sample of Black men who have sex with men (MSM) residing in a medium-sized city in the Deep South. Data were derived from a sample of 142 Black MSM aged 18-64 years who were eligible for PrEP from a community-based study known as "ACCELERATE!" We used multilevel structural equation modeling to assess PrEP use. Social support, sexual risk, and health care access were predictive of PrEP use. Notably, residing in a neighborhood with concentrated poverty was associated with decreased PrEP use. Our findings reveal neighborhood structural disadvantage is associated with decreased PrEP use among Black MSM, after adjusting of individual-level sociodemographic characteristics. There is an urgent need to develop HIV prevention interventions and programs that explicitly address structural-level factors to eliminate racial/ethnic differences in HIV.

Topics & Concepts

Men who have sex with menPre-exposure prophylaxisContext (archaeology)DemographyPovertyEthnic groupDisadvantagePsychological interventionGerontologyStructural equation modelingMedicineHealth equityPublic healthHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)PsychologyEnvironmental healthGeographyFamily medicineSociologyPolitical scienceNursingAnthropologyMathematicsSyphilisArchaeologyLawPsychiatryStatisticsHIV/AIDS Research and InterventionsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual RiskHomelessness and Social Issues