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EDITORIAL |
Michael Gross, a former associate editor of the Journal, is an independent consultant, Long Beach, Calif.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Michael Gross, PhD, 315 W 3rd St, #712, Long Beach, CA 90802 (e-mail: m144{at}earthlink.net).
| INTRODUCTION |
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| DIVISIVE IS AS DIVISIVE WAS |
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Yet the failures of AIDS prevention, the resurgence of indicator sexually transmitted infections (STIs) such as syphilis and rectal gonorrhea, and the appearance of unforeseen outbreaks such as recent clusters of lymphogranuloma venereum suggest that we remain as ill-equipped to control STI epidemics among stigmatized sexual minorities as we were a quarter-century ago.
More starkly now than at any time since the early months of the Reagan presidency, when AIDS emerged, fundamentalist Christian religious right (FCRR) political hegemony in the United States makes problematic any prevention efforts that mitigate the risks from forms of sexual expression proscribed by FCRR values. Other global fundamentalisms are equally malign or more so toward sexual minorities, but the United States considers itself an enlightened, secular, democratic state. With public health agencies pressured to withhold information about the proven protective benefits of condoms and deny resources to programs that address the realities of sex outside marriage among mutually monogamous malefemale couples, only value-neutral biomedical strategies such as a vaccine, microbicide, or oral prophylaxis with antiretroviral drugs seem capable of being effectively deployed among sexual minorities. Even biomedical strategies may fall victim to moralistic scrutiny, a challenge that already threatens the rollout of vaccines against human papilloma virus infection.6
| BEHAVIORAL CONFABULATION |
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Even among programs considered sufficiently effective to warrant federal support, a disproportionately small number have received resources sufficient for effective translation and implementation. FCRR politicians have worked doggedly to deny resources to programs that speak in sexual terms that are meaningful and motivating to their carefully selected gay male target audiences.10
An unexplained trend toward riskier sex emerged, in multiple cities, between 1993 and 1995, as measured by rising rates of gonorrhea and syphilis among gay men.11 Although highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART) was blamed for a relapse to unsafe sex, HAART was not proven effective for HIV treatment until 1996 and not widely prescribed until 1997.12 Nonetheless, fear that optimistic pharmaceutical advertisements misleadingly glamorized life with HIV prompted some public health officials to mount a counteradvertising campaign stressing that "AIDS is no picnic." But the campaign also reached those using HAART, who may have found in the same posters a rationale for unsupervised drug holidays. And nonadherence seems to play a far greater role in generating community-acquired antiretroviral drug resistance than does unsafe sex.13
An epidemic increase in crystal methamphetamine use, despite the direct threat posed by the drug, did not initiate barebacking (having sex without condoms) as a practice or promulgate "barebacker" as an identity. Even when researchers acknowledge that use of this drug may follow rather than facilitate HIV infection, they presume that drug treatment is a priority for curbing the further spread of HIV.14 This latest drug panic offers little insight into the most alarming aspect of the current epidemic among men who have sex with men: disproportionately high HIV acquisition among young African Americans.15
| WHEN MESSAGES MISFIRE |
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The eye-catching visuals of a recent "Stop the Sores" anti-syphilis campaign targeting gay men in southern California fail to include the most important ones: actual pictures of the sores. Secondary syphilis rashes barely receive a mention, although they are also infectious, are more persistent than transient primary lesions, and are readily ignored, misinterpreted, or misdiagnosed. Imprecise self-identification and referral underscores the need to facilitate periodic screening. However, screening through private physician practices and public health clinics may be unpalatable for men who have sex with men, gay-identified or not, who fear discovery or cling to denial; who feel compromised by the lack of privacy, brusqueness, or insensitivity they may encounter in these venues; or who seek to avoid prosecutorial demands that they identify sexual partners who may be nothing more to them than yesterdays screen name.
Resurgent syphilis rates not only measure increased numbers of sexual partners and declining condom use, but also may herald the waning relevance of a traditional control paradigm of case finding by self-referral, diagnosis, treatment, and contact tracing, a strategy that never anticipated normative high-turnover group sex and 247 solicitation of partners via the Internet. It seems well worth considering whether an effective way to augment syphilis control would be to devise and widely distribute a self-testing kit that could be administered in private, with facilitated access to treatment referrals. Would the net impact of such a kit offset the current mediocre utilization of public services that equate counseling with a stern warning about the wages of sin?
| A GOOD LIFE |
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Yes, it is entirely defensible to demand, for male cohabiting couples, the same economic opportunities, civil liberties, and legal privileges accorded to malefemale dyads electing similar domestic arrangements. Yes, vows of mutual devotion, fidelity, respect, support, and other attributes of attachment are as plausible between individuals of the same sex as between opposite-sex pairs. But no, it does not seem sensible to expect that a cacophonous political system, numbed mindless by the strident drumbeat of FCRR moralizing, would invest in promoting safer sodomy.
Gay organizations have found it much easier to use circuit parties celebrating gay sexuality to raise funds for HIV care than to use those funds to reduce unsafe sex at circuit parties. Barebacking as a prevalent fashion, as well as a profitable commodity for the erotica and cyberdating industries, calls for what has hitherto been conspicuously lacking: effective counteradvertising that eroticizes safer gay sex.20,21 In addition to substantial resources under autonomous community control, this would entail a sustained investment of commitment, vision, and creativity. For public health, the larger, unmet, challenge is to cultivate a shared, holistic apprehension of health among gay men and to create and support institutions that foster it.
The most profound absence is the saddest. Evicted from almost every flock, modern gay men have neither credible formulaic answers for, nor much of an incentive to keep their attention fixed on, the ultimate question: What, besides hot sex, constitutes a good life?
| Acknowledgments |
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Accepted for publication February 28, 2006.
| References |
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2. Smith G. Heterosexual and homosexual anal intercourse: an international perspective. Venereology. 2001;14:2837.
3. Brody S, Potterat J. Assessing the role of anal intercourse in the epidemiology of AIDS in Africa. Int J STD AIDS. 2003;14:431436.
4. CDC. Pneumocystis pneumoniaLos Angeles. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 1981;30(21):250252.[Medline]
5. Fee E, Brown TM. Michael S. Gottlieb and the identification of AIDS. Am J Public Health. 2006;96:982983.
6. MacKenzie D. Will cancer vaccine get to all women? New Scientist. April 16, 2005:8. Available at: http://www.newscientist.com/channel/sex/mg18624954.500. Accessed March 2, 2005.
7. Koo DJ, Begier EM, Henn MH, et al. HIV counseling and testing: less targeting, more testing. Am J Public Health. 2006;96:962964.
8. Compendium of HIV prevention interventions with evidence of effectiveness, from CDCs HIV/AIDS Prevention Research Synthesis Project. November 1999 (revised August 31, 2001). Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/hivcompendium/hivcompendium.htm. Accessed April 5, 2006.
9. Koblin B, Chesney M, Coates T, EXPLORE Study Team. Effects of a behavioural intervention to reduce acquisition of HIV infection among men who have sex with men: the EXPLORE randomised controlled study. Lancet. 2004; 364(9428):4150.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
10. Gross M. The second wave will drown us. Am J Public Health. 2003;93: 872881.
11. STDs among men who have sex with men. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/std/stats01/2001PDF/SFMsm2001.pdf. Accessed April 10, 2006.
12. Palella FJ Jr, Delaney KM, Moorman AC, et al. Declining morbidity and mortality among patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus infection. HIV Outpatient Study Investigators. N Engl J Med. 1998;338:853860.
13. Blower SM, Aschenbach AN, Gershengorn HB, Kahn JO. Predicting the unpredictable: transmission of drug-resistant HIV[published correction appears in Nat Med. 2003;9(1):146]. Nat Med. 2001;7:10161020.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
14. Beckett M, Burnam A Collins RL, et al. Substance use and high-risk sex among people with HIV: a comparison across exposure groups. AIDS Behav. 2003;7:209219.[CrossRef][Medline]
15. Millett GA, Peterson JL, Wolitski RJ, Stall R. Greater risk for HIV infection of Black men who have sex with men: a critical literature review. Am J Public Health. 2006;96:10071019.
16. Carter M. HIV-positive men may use "POZ parties" to reduce risk of spread of HIV, but other health risks may be involved. September 30, 2005. Available at: http://www.aidsmap.com/en/news/1C5EE17F-4304-4519-85AC-A139C9E47A76.asp. Accessed April 10, 2006.
17. Poz parties create HIV superinfection. September 30, 2005. Available at: http://www.rainbownetwork.com/Health/detail.asp?iData=24343&iCat=21&iChannel=16&nChannel=Health. Accessed April 10, 2006.
18. Mackellar DA, Valleroy LA, Secura GM, et al. Two decades after vaccine license: hepatitis B immunization and infection among young men who have sex with men. Am J Public Health. 2001; 91:965971.[Abstract]
19. Yee LY, Rhodes SD. Understanding correlates of hepatitis B virus vaccination in men who have sex with men: what have we learned? Sex Transm Dis. 2002;78:374377.
20. Herek GM, Gonzalez-Rivera M, Fead F, Welton D. Original research: AIDS educational videos for gay and bisexual men: a content analysis. J Gay Lesbian Med Assoc. 2001;5:143153.
21. Wright K. Is fear the best way to fight AIDS? January 6, 2006. Available at: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20060123/wright. Accessed April 10, 2006.
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