Cargando…

Online Outreach Services Among Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex With Other Men (MISM) in Ontario, Canada: An Online Survey

BACKGROUND: Men who use the Internet to seek sex with other men (MISM) are increasingly using the Internet to find sexual health information and to seek sexual partners, with some research suggesting HIV transmission is associated with sexual partnering online. Aiming to “meet men where they are at,...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Brennan, David J, Lachowsky, Nathan J, Georgievski, Georgi, Rosser, Brian R Simon, MacLachlan, Duncan, Murray, James
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications Inc. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4704956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26681440
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.4503
_version_ 1782408941979828224
author Brennan, David J
Lachowsky, Nathan J
Georgievski, Georgi
Rosser, Brian R Simon
MacLachlan, Duncan
Murray, James
author_facet Brennan, David J
Lachowsky, Nathan J
Georgievski, Georgi
Rosser, Brian R Simon
MacLachlan, Duncan
Murray, James
author_sort Brennan, David J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Men who use the Internet to seek sex with other men (MISM) are increasingly using the Internet to find sexual health information and to seek sexual partners, with some research suggesting HIV transmission is associated with sexual partnering online. Aiming to “meet men where they are at,” some AIDS service organizations (ASOs) deliver online outreach services via sociosexual Internet sites and mobile apps. OBJECTIVE: To investigate MISM's experiences and self-perceived impacts of online outreach. METHODS: From December 2013 to January 2014, MISM aged 16 years or older were recruited from Internet sites, mobile apps, and ASOs across Ontario to complete a 15-minute anonymous online questionnaire regarding their experience of online outreach. Demographic factors associated with encountering online outreach were assessed using backward-stepwise multivariable logistic regression (P<.05 was considered significant). RESULTS: Of 1830 MISM who completed the survey, 8.25% (151/1830) reported direct experience with online outreach services. Encountering online outreach was more likely for Aboriginal versus white MISM, MISM from Toronto compared with MISM from either Eastern or Southwestern Ontario, and MISM receiving any social assistance. MISM who experienced online outreach felt the service provider was friendly (130/141, 92.2%), easy to understand (122/140, 87.1%), helpful (115/139, 82.7%), prompt (107/143, 74.8%), and knowledgeable (92/134, 68.7%); half reported they received a useful referral (49/98, 50%). Few MISM felt the interaction was annoying (13/141, 9.2%) or confusing (18/142, 12.7%). As a result of their last online outreach encounter, MISM reported the following: better understanding of (88/147, 59.9%) and comfort with (75/147, 51.0%) their level of sexual risk; increased knowledge (71/147, 48.3%); and feeling less anxious (51/147, 34.7%), better connected (46/147, 31.3%), and more empowered (40/147, 27.2%). Behaviorally, they reported using condoms more frequently (48/147, 32.7%) and effectively (35/147, 23.8%); getting tested for HIV (43/125, 34.4%) or STIs (42/147, 28.6%); asking for their partners’ HIV statuses (37/147, 25.2%); and serosorting (26/147, 17.7%). Few MISM reported no changes (15/147, 10.2%) and most would use these services again (98/117, 83.8%). Most MISM who did not use online outreach said they did not need these services (1074/1559, 68.89%) or were unaware of them (496/1559, 31.82%). CONCLUSIONS: This is the first online outreach evaluation study of MISM in Canada. Online outreach services are a relatively new and underdeveloped area of intervention, but are a promising health promotion strategy to provide service referrals and engage diverse groups of MISM in sexual health education.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4704956
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher JMIR Publications Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-47049562016-01-12 Online Outreach Services Among Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex With Other Men (MISM) in Ontario, Canada: An Online Survey Brennan, David J Lachowsky, Nathan J Georgievski, Georgi Rosser, Brian R Simon MacLachlan, Duncan Murray, James J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Men who use the Internet to seek sex with other men (MISM) are increasingly using the Internet to find sexual health information and to seek sexual partners, with some research suggesting HIV transmission is associated with sexual partnering online. Aiming to “meet men where they are at,” some AIDS service organizations (ASOs) deliver online outreach services via sociosexual Internet sites and mobile apps. OBJECTIVE: To investigate MISM's experiences and self-perceived impacts of online outreach. METHODS: From December 2013 to January 2014, MISM aged 16 years or older were recruited from Internet sites, mobile apps, and ASOs across Ontario to complete a 15-minute anonymous online questionnaire regarding their experience of online outreach. Demographic factors associated with encountering online outreach were assessed using backward-stepwise multivariable logistic regression (P<.05 was considered significant). RESULTS: Of 1830 MISM who completed the survey, 8.25% (151/1830) reported direct experience with online outreach services. Encountering online outreach was more likely for Aboriginal versus white MISM, MISM from Toronto compared with MISM from either Eastern or Southwestern Ontario, and MISM receiving any social assistance. MISM who experienced online outreach felt the service provider was friendly (130/141, 92.2%), easy to understand (122/140, 87.1%), helpful (115/139, 82.7%), prompt (107/143, 74.8%), and knowledgeable (92/134, 68.7%); half reported they received a useful referral (49/98, 50%). Few MISM felt the interaction was annoying (13/141, 9.2%) or confusing (18/142, 12.7%). As a result of their last online outreach encounter, MISM reported the following: better understanding of (88/147, 59.9%) and comfort with (75/147, 51.0%) their level of sexual risk; increased knowledge (71/147, 48.3%); and feeling less anxious (51/147, 34.7%), better connected (46/147, 31.3%), and more empowered (40/147, 27.2%). Behaviorally, they reported using condoms more frequently (48/147, 32.7%) and effectively (35/147, 23.8%); getting tested for HIV (43/125, 34.4%) or STIs (42/147, 28.6%); asking for their partners’ HIV statuses (37/147, 25.2%); and serosorting (26/147, 17.7%). Few MISM reported no changes (15/147, 10.2%) and most would use these services again (98/117, 83.8%). Most MISM who did not use online outreach said they did not need these services (1074/1559, 68.89%) or were unaware of them (496/1559, 31.82%). CONCLUSIONS: This is the first online outreach evaluation study of MISM in Canada. Online outreach services are a relatively new and underdeveloped area of intervention, but are a promising health promotion strategy to provide service referrals and engage diverse groups of MISM in sexual health education. JMIR Publications Inc. 2015-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4704956/ /pubmed/26681440 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.4503 Text en ©David J Brennan, Nathan J Lachowsky, Georgi Georgievski, Brian R Simon Rosser, Duncan MacLachlan, James Murray, Cruising Counts Research Team. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 09.12.2015. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Brennan, David J
Lachowsky, Nathan J
Georgievski, Georgi
Rosser, Brian R Simon
MacLachlan, Duncan
Murray, James
Online Outreach Services Among Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex With Other Men (MISM) in Ontario, Canada: An Online Survey
title Online Outreach Services Among Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex With Other Men (MISM) in Ontario, Canada: An Online Survey
title_full Online Outreach Services Among Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex With Other Men (MISM) in Ontario, Canada: An Online Survey
title_fullStr Online Outreach Services Among Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex With Other Men (MISM) in Ontario, Canada: An Online Survey
title_full_unstemmed Online Outreach Services Among Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex With Other Men (MISM) in Ontario, Canada: An Online Survey
title_short Online Outreach Services Among Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex With Other Men (MISM) in Ontario, Canada: An Online Survey
title_sort online outreach services among men who use the internet to seek sex with other men (mism) in ontario, canada: an online survey
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4704956/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26681440
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.4503
work_keys_str_mv AT brennandavidj onlineoutreachservicesamongmenwhousetheinternettoseeksexwithothermenmisminontariocanadaanonlinesurvey
AT lachowskynathanj onlineoutreachservicesamongmenwhousetheinternettoseeksexwithothermenmisminontariocanadaanonlinesurvey
AT georgievskigeorgi onlineoutreachservicesamongmenwhousetheinternettoseeksexwithothermenmisminontariocanadaanonlinesurvey
AT rosserbrianrsimon onlineoutreachservicesamongmenwhousetheinternettoseeksexwithothermenmisminontariocanadaanonlinesurvey
AT maclachlanduncan onlineoutreachservicesamongmenwhousetheinternettoseeksexwithothermenmisminontariocanadaanonlinesurvey
AT murrayjames onlineoutreachservicesamongmenwhousetheinternettoseeksexwithothermenmisminontariocanadaanonlinesurvey
AT onlineoutreachservicesamongmenwhousetheinternettoseeksexwithothermenmisminontariocanadaanonlinesurvey