Childhood sexual abuse and social shaming of young gay men linked to later health issues
From the University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences media release:
Gay and bisexual men enrolled in a long-term study of HIV who
reported sexual abuse and social shaming in childhood experience
psychosocial health problems later in life that could put them at
greater risk for HIV, report University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health researchers at the XVIII International AIDS Conference.
The study included more than 1,000 HIV-positive and negative gay and
bisexual men enrolled in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS),
which began in 1983 and is the longest-running National Institutes of
Health-funded investigation of HIV/AIDS.
Almost 10 percent of the participants reported that they had been
victims of childhood sexual abuse and nearly 30 percent had experienced
gay-related victimization between the ages of 12 and 14, including
verbal insults, bullying, threats of physical violence and physical
assaults. Men who experienced childhood sexual abuse and a sense of
masculinity failure were more likely to use illicit drugs and to engage
in risky sexual behavior in adulthood.
According to study authors, these health issues combine to create a
"syndemic," or linked epidemic, that together may be driving the AIDS
epidemic in gay men.
"Our study shows that the early socialization experiences of gay men
can be deeply stigmatizing and increase their risks for these syndemic
conditions in adulthood," said Sin How Lim, Ph.D., study author and
post-doctoral associate, Pitt's Graduate School of Public Health. "Given
the long-lasting impacts, effective interventions should address
multiple interrelated social issues early on rather than focusing on
each problem in isolation."
Study co-authors include Amy Herrick, M.A., Thomas Guadamuz, Ph.D.,
Mark Friedman, Ph.D., Michael Marshal, Ph.D., and Ronald Stall, Ph.D.,
all of the University of Pittsburgh. The study was funded by the
National Institutes of Health.
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