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HIV Risk Behaviors in the U.S. Transgender Population: Prevalence and Predictors in a Large Internet Sample
Authors:Jamie Feldman  Rebecca Swinburne Romine  Walter O. Bockting
Affiliation:1. Program in Human Sexuality, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA;2. LGBT Health Initiative Division of Gender, Sexuality, and Health, New York State Psychiatric Institute/Columbia Psychiatry, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York, USA
Abstract:To study the influence of gender on HIV risk, a sample of the U.S. transgender population (N = 1,229) was recruited via the Internet. HIV risk and prevalence were lower than reported in prior studies of localized, urban samples but higher than the overall U.S. population. Findings suggest that gender nonconformity alone does not itself result in markedly higher HIV risk. Sex with nontransgender men emerged as the strongest independent predictor of unsafe sex for both male-to-female (MtF) and female-to-male (FtM) participants. These sexual relationships constitute a process that may either affirm or problematize gender identity and sexual orientation, with different emphases for MtFs and FtMs, respectively.
Keywords:HIV  transgender  United States  Internet  gender identity  unprotected sex  sexual orientation
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