Deakin University
Browse

Social Influences on Engagement With HIV Testing, Treatment and Care Services Among Men Who Have Sex With Men Living in Rural Uganda

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-26, 04:01 authored by LJ Nakiganda, BR Bavinton, AE Grulich, D Serwadda, R Nakubulwa, IM Poynten, S Bell
Men who have sex with men in Uganda are a heterogenous, discriminated population, experiencing high HIV burden, limited access to HIV testing, and low treatment adherence. We contribute to the lack of information about men who have sex with men in rural Uganda by using socio-ecological analyses to examine the social influences shaping their engagement with HIV services. Based on in-depth interviews with 16 men, our findings reveal the inhibitive influence of interpersonal relationships with sexual partners, peers and families, and institutional influences within health service and non-governmental organizational settings. Yet men take action to strategize and seek support to enhance engagement with HIV care in heavily criminalized and stigmatized settings. Future HIV prevention, testing, treatment, and care responses could draw on what affected individuals and communities are already doing to enhance access to HIV services and the effective support strategies of some non-governmental organizations and healthcare workers.

History

Related Materials

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Qualitative Health Research

Volume

32

Article number

ARTN 10497323211058162

Pagination

635-645

ISSN

1049-7323

eISSN

1552-7557

Issue

4

Publisher

SAGE Publications