Impact of Combination Therapies on HIV Risk Perceptions and Sexual Risk Among HIV-Positive and HIV-Negative Gay and Bisexual Men
The availability of improved HIV treatments may prompt reduced concern about HIV and sexual risk. Gay and bisexual men ( N = 554, 17% HIV-positive) completed measures of treatment attitudes, sexual risk, and assumptions regarding the infectiousness of sexual partners. A substantial minority reported...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Health psychology 2000-03, Vol.19 (2), p.134-145 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The availability of improved HIV treatments may prompt
reduced concern about HIV and sexual risk. Gay and bisexual men (
N
= 554, 17% HIV-positive) completed measures of treatment
attitudes, sexual risk, and assumptions regarding the infectiousness
of sexual partners. A substantial minority reported reduced HIV
concern related to treatment advances. Reduced HIV concern was an
independent predictor of sexual risk, particularly among
HIV-positive men. In response to hypothetical scenarios describing
sex with an HIV-positive partner, participants rated the risk of
unprotected sex to be lower if the partner was taking combination
treatments and had an undetectable viral load, relative to scenarios
with a seropositive partner not taking combination treatments.
Prevention efforts must address attitudinal shifts prompted by
recent treatment successes, stressing the continued importance of
safer sex, and that an undetectable viral load does not eliminate
infection risks. |
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ISSN: | 0278-6133 1930-7810 |
DOI: | 10.1037/0278-6133.19.2.134 |