In Their Own Words: How Trans Women Acquired HIV Infection

Despite high HIV prevalence, the reasons trans women acquire HIV are not well understood. Trans women are often mis-classified or aggregated with men who have sex with men (MSM) in epidemiologic studies and HIV surveillance data. Trans women enrolled in the 2019/2020 National HIV Behavioral Surveill...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS and behavior 2022-06, Vol.26 (6), p.2091-2098
Hauptverfasser: Wilson, Erin C., Hernandez, Christopher J., Arayasirikul, Sean, Scheer, Susan, Trujillo, Dillon, Sicro, Sofia, Turner, Caitlin M., McFarland, Willi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite high HIV prevalence, the reasons trans women acquire HIV are not well understood. Trans women are often mis-classified or aggregated with men who have sex with men (MSM) in epidemiologic studies and HIV surveillance data. Trans women enrolled in the 2019/2020 National HIV Behavioral Surveillance Study in San Francisco were asked an open-ended question about how they were infected with HIV. The most common responses were “Sex with a straight cisgender man partner when the respondent identified as a trans woman” (43.0%); “Sexual assault” (13.9%); “Injection drug use (IDU)” (10.1%); “IDU or sexual contact” (7.6%) and “Sex with a partner who injected drugs” (7.6%). Sex with a cisgender man partner prior to identifying as a trans women (MSM contact) was not mentioned by any respondent. HIV prevention strategies targeting MSM will fail to reach trans women and many of their cisgender men partners.
ISSN:1090-7165
1573-3254
DOI:10.1007/s10461-021-03555-8