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This abstract was
presented orally at the 11th Annual Canadian Conference on HIV/AIDS Research in
Winnipeg in April 2002, and will be presented orally at the XIV International
AIDS Conference to be held in Barcelona, Spain, in July 2002.
Reflections on the concept of HIV treatment optimism
by young gay men (YGM) in the context of rising HIV incidence
in Vancouver
Mary Lou Miller,
Arn J. Schilder, Chris Buchner, Steve Martindale, Keith Chan,
Kevin JP Craib, Michael V. O'Shaughnessy, Robert S. Hogg, Patricia
Spittal
The Vanguard Project, BC Centre for Excellence
in HIV/AIDS, St. Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, BC.
INTRODUCTION:
"HAART optimism" or "HIV optimism" is the
concern expressed by some health care practitioners that the availability
of effective antiretroviral therapy may be linked to a resurgence
of HIV risk behaviour. New statistical findings from the Vanguard
cohort, however, indicate that only a minority of gay and bisexual
men was optimistic in light of new HIV medications.
OBJECTIVES:
This study qualitatively explores the social and cultural contexts
of high-risk decision-making among both HIV-negative and HIV-positive
young gay men to ascertain if they believe that new treatments
inform risk-taking behaviour.
METHOD:
Data for this study were collected through a series of in-depth
interviews with 26 participants, 13 of whom had seroconverted
since baseline. Key themes and issues were identified and managed
through NU*DIST, an ethnographic software system.
RESULTS:
Qualitative analysis indicates that as better understandings
and experience with drug-related side effects emerge, HAART's
cultural function changes. HAART intervention is a healthy choice,
but as a concept HIV optimism appears to have little relevance
in gay men's sexual risk realities and decision-making. Participants
related that more relevant understandings of their sexual vulnerabilities
include: childhood trauma - including sexual and physical
violence which serves to propel men into environments of
risk, including the survival sex trade; and, later in life, unstable
periods of coming out and substance use. Therefore the "optimistic"
effects of HAART are attenuated by the daily realities of men
living within the epidemic.
CONCLUSIONS:
HAART improves the health and well being of HIV-positive men;
however, we did not find that it affected sexual risk decision-making.
Moreover, the omnipresent realities of gay men lives are filled
with nested risks associated with issues related to intimacy,
stigma, homophobia, and substance abuse. To intervene appropriately,
health practitioners must accommodate the social and cultural
realities of gay men's lives.

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