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RESEARCH AND PRACTICE |
Matthew J. Mimiaga is with the Fenway Institute, Boston, MA, and the Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. Andrew D. Fair, Ashley M. Tetu, and Rodney VanDerwarker are with the Fenway Institute, Boston. David S. Novak and Thomas Bertrand are with the State Laboratory Institute, Division of STD Prevention, Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Jamaica Plain. Stephan Adelson is with Online Buddies Inc, Cambridge, MA. Kenneth H. Mayer is with the Fenway Institute, Boston, and Brown University School of Medicine/Miriam Hospital, Providence, RI.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Matthew J. Mimiaga, Fenway Institute, Fenway Community Health, Prudential Tower, 4th Fl, 800 Boylston St, Boston, MA 02199 (e-mail: mmimiaga{at}fenwayhealth.org).
US men who have sex with men (n=1848) completed an online questionnaire about their willingness to use Internet-based partner notification. Eighty-one percent reported that it would be important to them to receive a partner notification e-mail if they had been exposed to a sexually transmitted infection. Seventy percent reported that if infected, they would use a public health specialist to inform partners of possible exposure through Internet notification. There was broad acceptance of Internet partner notification by at-risk US men who have sex with men, including a willingness to receive or initiate a notification e-mail.
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