HIV sexual risk behavior following bereavement in gay men. |
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Authors: | Mayne, Tracy J. Acree, Michael Chesney, Margaret A. Folkman, Susan |
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Abstract: | The present study followed a group of 100 gay men up to 1 year before and 1 year after losing a partner to AIDS (University of California, San Francisco Coping Project). Following bereavement, participants were at increased risk for engaging in unprotected anal intercourse: at 4 to 6 months for HIV-negative men and at 8 to 12 months for HIV-positive men. Sociodemographic variables, HIV serostatus, substance use, depression, prebereavement relationship quality, and social support did not explain sexual risk-taking in this sample. However; men who engaged in unprotected anal intercourse were twice as likely to be involved in a new primary relationship as those who did not. The authors concluded that risk varies over time by HIV status and may involve engagement in new relationships. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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