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Geographic Mobility, Place Attachment, and the Changing Geography of Sex among African American and Latinx MSM Who Use Substances in Los Angeles

The places that people go and interact with others, along with the characteristics of those places, determine degrees of sexual health risk and concomitant prevention opportunities for gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM). The objective of this paper is to use syndemic theory to...

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Published in:Journal of urban health 2020-10, Vol.97 (5), p.609-622
Main Authors: Cassels, Susan, Meltzer, Dan, Loustalot, Colin, Ragsdale, Amy, Shoptaw, Steve, Gorbach, Pamina M.
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Language:English
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description The places that people go and interact with others, along with the characteristics of those places, determine degrees of sexual health risk and concomitant prevention opportunities for gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM). The objective of this paper is to use syndemic theory to guide analyses of 20 in-depth interviews with African American and Hispanic/Latinx MSM living in Los Angeles. We describe the places in which African American and Latinx MSM interviewees live and socialize, and how these places influence sexual behavior, drug use, and access to health care. We find common spatial patterns in mobility, incongruence in residential and sexual places, and differing geographic patterns of sex by men who use geo-social hook-up apps. Significant instability in home life and varying forms of mobility and risk-taking were a response to cumulative disadvantage and intersecting structural forces including poverty, racism, and homophobia. Our results strongly suggest that geographic mobility is a syndemic factor for HIV risk among MSM in Los Angeles, as mobility amplified negative impacts of other syndemic factors. Innovative place-interventions to reduce HIV incidence and disparities in HIV need to acknowledge the synergistic factors that drive higher HIV incidence among AA and Latinx MSM.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s11524-020-00481-3
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subjects Adult
Bisexuality - statistics & numerical data
Black or African American - statistics & numerical data
Epidemiology
Geography
Health Informatics
Hispanic or Latino - statistics & numerical data
HIV Infections - epidemiology
Homophobia - statistics & numerical data
Homosexuality, Male - statistics & numerical data
Humans
Interpersonal Relations
Los Angeles - epidemiology
Male
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Middle Aged
Poverty - statistics & numerical data
Public Health
Risk Factors
Sexual and Gender Minorities - statistics & numerical data
Sexual Behavior - statistics & numerical data
Substance-Related Disorders - epidemiology
Syndemic
Young Adult
title Geographic Mobility, Place Attachment, and the Changing Geography of Sex among African American and Latinx MSM Who Use Substances in Los Angeles
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