1. “And Then Break the Cliché”: Understanding and Addressing HIV Vulnerability Through Development of an HIV Prevention Telenovela with Men Who Have Sex with Men and Transwomen in Lima, Peru
- Author
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Garcia, Jonathan, Perez-Brumer, Amaya G, Cabello, Robinson, and Clark, Jesse L
- Subjects
Gender Studies ,Human Society ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Mental Health ,Pediatric AIDS ,HIV/AIDS ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Female ,Focus Groups ,HIV Infections ,Health Risk Behaviors ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Male ,Peru ,Prevalence ,Risk Factors ,Role Playing ,Sexual Behavior ,Sexual Health ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Social Stigma ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Television ,Transgender Persons ,HIV prevention ,Sexual scripts ,Critical consciousness ,Men who have sex with men ,Transgender women ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Studies in Human Society ,Psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Gender studies ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) continue to affect men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TW) in Peru at disproportionately high rates. The ineffectiveness of traditional prevention strategies may be due to the disconnect between health promotion messages and community-level understandings of sexual cultures. We conducted 15 workshops with MSM and TW to develop a community-based sexual health intervention. Intervention development consisted of focus groups and scenic improvisation to identify sexual scripts for an HIV prevention telenovela, or Spanish soap opera. Workshops were stratified by self-reported socioeconomic status, sexual orientation, and gender identity: (1) low-income MSM (n = 9); (2) middle/high-income MSM (n = 6); and (3) TW (n = 8). Employing a conceptual model based on sexual scripts and critical consciousness theories, this paper reports on three themes identified during the telenovela-development process as participants sought to "rescript" social and sexual stereotypes associated with HIV-related vulnerability: (1) management of MSM and TW social identities at the intersection of socioeconomic status, sexuality, and gender performance; (2) social constructions of gender and/or sexual role and perceived and actual HIV/STI risk(s) within sexual partnership interactions; and (3) idealized and actual sexual scripts in the negotiation of safer sex practices between MSM/TW and their partners. These findings are key to reframing existing prevention strategies that fail to effectively engage poorly defined "high-risk populations." Leveraging community-based expertise, the results provide an alternative to the static transfer of information through expert-patient interactions in didactic sessions commonly used in HIV prevention interventions among MSM and TW.
- Published
- 2018