Psycho-social Resilience and Risky HIV Behaviors among Black Males who have Sex with Males

The incidence rate of HIV among Black males having sex with Black males (BMSM) is high compared to that of other racial groups. Researchers have established the association between inappropriate sexual practices, age, income, and environmental determinants and HIV positive status among BMSM. Guided...

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Main Author: Iyokho, Wilson Osaro
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks 2015
Subjects:
SEX
Online Access:https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/225
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1224&context=dissertations
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spelling ndltd-waldenu.edu-oai-scholarworks.waldenu.edu-dissertations-12242019-10-30T01:01:09Z Psycho-social Resilience and Risky HIV Behaviors among Black Males who have Sex with Males Iyokho, Wilson Osaro The incidence rate of HIV among Black males having sex with Black males (BMSM) is high compared to that of other racial groups. Researchers have established the association between inappropriate sexual practices, age, income, and environmental determinants and HIV positive status among BMSM. Guided by resilience theory, the purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between HIV risk behavior and resiliency with the goal of identifying a new intervention to mitigate the HIV infection rate in the BMSM community. The theoretical framework used for this study was the resilience theory. This theory is concern with the phenomenon of why some people thrive after period of catastrophic adversity while others do not. A quantitative research design was used to test for a correlation between psychosocial resilience and HIV risk behavior. Fifty seven respondents were included in the study, 28 who were HIV positive, and 29 who were HIV negative. The Risky Behavior Questionnaire and the Resilience Survey were used to collect study data. The main study finding was a significant correlation between resilience and sex-related HIV risk behaviors, including unprotected sex, a lack of awareness of HIV status, multiple male sexual partners, and alcohol and drug use during sex. According to study findings, BMSM with higher resilience might be less likely to engage in sex-related HIV risk behaviors than those with low resilience. Strategies to mitigate HIV transmission could include resilience training. The benefit to the society would be reduced HIV infections transmission due to reduced risky HIV behaviors. The population social change would be the importance of the resiliency practice among BMSM in an effort to dispel the fear about the disease. 2015-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/225 https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1224&context=dissertations Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies en ScholarWorks BLACK MSM COPING STRATEGIES HIV/AIDS INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT PSYCHOSOCIAL RESILIENCE SEX Epidemiology Medicine and Health Sciences
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic BLACK MSM
COPING STRATEGIES
HIV/AIDS
INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT
PSYCHOSOCIAL RESILIENCE
SEX
Epidemiology
Medicine and Health Sciences
spellingShingle BLACK MSM
COPING STRATEGIES
HIV/AIDS
INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT
PSYCHOSOCIAL RESILIENCE
SEX
Epidemiology
Medicine and Health Sciences
Iyokho, Wilson Osaro
Psycho-social Resilience and Risky HIV Behaviors among Black Males who have Sex with Males
description The incidence rate of HIV among Black males having sex with Black males (BMSM) is high compared to that of other racial groups. Researchers have established the association between inappropriate sexual practices, age, income, and environmental determinants and HIV positive status among BMSM. Guided by resilience theory, the purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between HIV risk behavior and resiliency with the goal of identifying a new intervention to mitigate the HIV infection rate in the BMSM community. The theoretical framework used for this study was the resilience theory. This theory is concern with the phenomenon of why some people thrive after period of catastrophic adversity while others do not. A quantitative research design was used to test for a correlation between psychosocial resilience and HIV risk behavior. Fifty seven respondents were included in the study, 28 who were HIV positive, and 29 who were HIV negative. The Risky Behavior Questionnaire and the Resilience Survey were used to collect study data. The main study finding was a significant correlation between resilience and sex-related HIV risk behaviors, including unprotected sex, a lack of awareness of HIV status, multiple male sexual partners, and alcohol and drug use during sex. According to study findings, BMSM with higher resilience might be less likely to engage in sex-related HIV risk behaviors than those with low resilience. Strategies to mitigate HIV transmission could include resilience training. The benefit to the society would be reduced HIV infections transmission due to reduced risky HIV behaviors. The population social change would be the importance of the resiliency practice among BMSM in an effort to dispel the fear about the disease.
author Iyokho, Wilson Osaro
author_facet Iyokho, Wilson Osaro
author_sort Iyokho, Wilson Osaro
title Psycho-social Resilience and Risky HIV Behaviors among Black Males who have Sex with Males
title_short Psycho-social Resilience and Risky HIV Behaviors among Black Males who have Sex with Males
title_full Psycho-social Resilience and Risky HIV Behaviors among Black Males who have Sex with Males
title_fullStr Psycho-social Resilience and Risky HIV Behaviors among Black Males who have Sex with Males
title_full_unstemmed Psycho-social Resilience and Risky HIV Behaviors among Black Males who have Sex with Males
title_sort psycho-social resilience and risky hiv behaviors among black males who have sex with males
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2015
url https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/225
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1224&context=dissertations
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