Recruiting Substance-Using Men Who Have Sex With Men into HIV Prevention Research: Current Status and Future Directions

Research investigators have identified increasing challenges to the recruitment of men who have sex with men (MSM) for observational and intervention HIV/AIDS studies. To address these issues, program staff from the National Institute on Drug Abuse convened a meeting on April 28th to 29th, 2009 to d...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS and behavior 2012-08, Vol.16 (6), p.1411-1419
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description Research investigators have identified increasing challenges to the recruitment of men who have sex with men (MSM) for observational and intervention HIV/AIDS studies. To address these issues, program staff from the National Institute on Drug Abuse convened a meeting on April 28th to 29th, 2009 to discuss issues in MSM recruitment. The panel indicated that there was decreased community identification with HIV research, although altruistic, community-oriented motives continued to be important. Substance use adds to recruitment challenges, particularly recruitment of MSM who use stigmatized substances. Relatively new recruitment methods such as respondent driven sampling, venue-data-time sampling, and internet sampling have helped advance knowledge about the recruitment process; however, they have not mitigated the challenges to MSM recruitment. Recruitment of youth and members of racial/ethnic minority populations present additional considerations. This report summarizes the meeting’s proceedings, key points of discussion, and areas for further research consideration.
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subjects Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
Data Collection - methods
Data Collection - trends
Drug Abuse
Ethnicity
Gays & lesbians
Health Psychology
Health Services Research - organization & administration
Health Services Research - trends
HIV
HIV Infections - complications
HIV Infections - prevention & control
Homosexuality
Homosexuality, Male
Human immunodeficiency virus
Humans
Infectious Diseases
Internet
Intervention
Knowledge
Male
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Men
Minority Groups
Patient Selection
Prevention
Public Health
Recruitment
Sampling
Sex
Sexually transmitted diseases
STD
Substance use
Substance-Related Disorders - complications
Substantive Review
title Recruiting Substance-Using Men Who Have Sex With Men into HIV Prevention Research: Current Status and Future Directions
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