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Understanding the Impact of Childhood Sexual Abuse on Men's Risk Behavior: Protocol for a Mixed-Methods Study

Overview
Journal JMIR Res Protoc
Publisher JMIR Publications
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2018 Feb 28
PMID 29483063
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) remains a critical public health issue among black and Latino men who have sex with men (MSM), as it is associated with multiple negative outcomes including substance misuse, poor mental health, revictimization, and high-risk sexual behavior. Most CSA research with MSM relies on quantitative assessment that often precludes consideration of cultural variations in how formative sexual experiences are understood and is based on inconsistent or overly restrictive definitions of abuse, and therefore may fail to detect certain abusive experiences (eg, those involving female perpetrators), which can have harmful health consequences if they remain unrecognized.

Objective: The objective of this study is to overcome existing limitations in the literature by drawing on perspectives of black and Latino MSM and men who have sex with men and women (MSMW), as well as relevant service providers to better understand the role of, and the need to include, sexual abuse histories (eg, CSA) in treatment and counseling settings, with the long-term goal of improving assessment and health outcomes.

Methods: We will conduct mixed-methods interviews, framed by an intersectionality approach, with 80 black and Latino men (40 MSM and 40 MSMW) in New York City (NYC), exploring appraisals of their formative sexual experiences, including those described as consensual but meeting criteria for CSA. We will also interview 30 local service providers representing substance abuse treatment, mental health care, and HIV prevention and outreach.

Results: The study was launched in May 2017.

Conclusions: This formative research will inform testable approaches to assessing and incorporating sexual abuse history into substance abuse treatment and other health and mental health services used by men with such histories.

Citing Articles

Examining Cultural Competency and Sexual Abuse Training Needs Among Service Providers Working with Black and Latino Sexual Minority Men.

Downing Jr M, Benoit E, Coe L, Brown D, Steen J J Soc Serv Res. 2023; 49(1):79-92.

PMID: 38108062 PMC: 10723252. DOI: 10.1080/01488376.2022.2157524.


Service provider interpretations of childhood sexual experiences among sexual minority men.

Benoit E, Downing M, Brown D, Coe L Psychol Serv. 2022; 20(Suppl 1):94-102.

PMID: 35324232 PMC: 10201917. DOI: 10.1037/ser0000638.


Early Sexual Experiences, Mental Health, and Risk Behavior among Black Non-Hispanic and Hispanic / Latino Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM).

Downing M, Benoit E, Brown D, Coe L, Hirshfield S, Pansulla L J Child Sex Abus. 2019; 29(1):41-61.

PMID: 31697197 PMC: 7035177. DOI: 10.1080/10538712.2019.1685618.

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