Title
Male sex workers: Practices, contexts, and vulnerabilities for HIV acquisition and transmission
Date Issued
17 January 2015
Access level
open access
Resource Type
review
Author(s)
Baral S.D.
Friedman M.R.
Geibel S.
Rebe K.
Bozhinov B.
Diouf D.
Sabin K.
Holland C.E.
Chan R.
Publisher(s)
Lancet Publishing Group
Abstract
Male sex workers who sell or exchange sex for money or goods encompass a very diverse population across and within countries worldwide. Information characterising their practices, contexts where they live, and their needs is limited, because these individuals are generally included as a subset of larger studies focused on gay men and other men who have sex with men (MSM) or even female sex workers. Male sex workers, irrespective of their sexual orientation, mostly offer sex to men and rarely identify as sex workers, using local or international terms instead. Growing evidence indicates a sustained or increasing burden of HIV among some male sex workers within the context of the slowing global HIV pandemic. Several synergistic facilitators could be potentiating HIV acquisition and transmission among male sex workers, including biological, behavioural, and structural determinants. Criminalisation and intersectional stigmas of same-sex practices, commercial sex, and HIV all augment risk for HIV and sexually transmitted infections among male sex workers and reduce the likelihood of these people accessing essential services. These contexts, taken together with complex sexual networks among male sex workers, define this group as a key population underserved by current HIV prevention, treatment, and care services. Dedicated efforts are needed to make those services available for the sake of both public health and human rights. Evidence-based and human rights-affirming services dedicated specifically to male sex workers are needed to improve health outcomes for these men and the people within their sexual networks.
Start page
260
End page
273
Volume
385
Issue
9964
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Dermatología, Enfermedades venéreas
Ciencias socio biomédicas (planificación familiar, salud sexual, efectos políticos y sociales de la investigación biomédica)
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84921346351
PubMed ID
Source
The Lancet
ISSN of the container
01406736
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus